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© The Pakistan Development Review
51:4 Part I (Winter 2012) pp. 51:4, 7-22
The Quaid-i-Azam Lecture
Economic Reforms in Pakistan: One Step Forwar·d,
Two Steps Backwards
ISHRAT HUSAIN
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In 1998 I was invited by Dr Sarfraz Qureshi, the then Director of PIDE to deliver a
lecture on "The Political Economy of Reforms: A Case Study of Pakistan".
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This lecture
was subsequently published by PIDE as a monograph. A year later, in ·December 1999, I
had the honour of becoming the Governor of the State. Bank of Pakistan and actually
participated actively in the formulation and implementation of economic reforms. During·
the six year period of public policy making I realised that my knowledge about the
political economy as manifested in my PI,DE lecture was incomplete. The narrative was
more complex than 1 had developed as an outsider.
Now, six years later after my retirement from the State Bank of Pakistan I again
reflected upon this topic as an observer and analyst rather than a participant. I realised .
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that my learnings have become much richer by applying these different prisms-those of
an international development economist>. a public policy-maker and now an independent
analyst. I am .grateful to Dr Rashid Amjad and Dr Musleh ud Din and their colleagues at
PIDE for providing me this opportunity to share these learning with my colleagues, peers
and other scholars present here today.
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The political economy of economic reforms and structural adjustment has bec ome
focus of growing attention in the literature drawing at the inter-disciplinary tools of
analysis· and cross-country comparative perspectives. Detailed case studies of country
situations do throw useful insights which are not captured through cross-country studies.
-The key question that is explored by this group of researchers is: if policy and
institutional reforms are associated· with high economic pay offs, then why are these
reform programmes not sustained and imp1einented consistently? Why are they derailed?
I would like to focus the discussion on Pakistan only and address the following q estions:
Why is Pakistan slipping relative to other developing and emerging countries?'
Why is the record of reforms so poor and uneven?
Why are policy and institutional changes not sustained ovei- time? .
Before I address these questions I should establish the case as to why economic
reform should take·place in the first instance. If a country is· an equilibrium. state with
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Isharat Husain <ihusain@iba.edu.pk> is Dean and DireCto, Institute of Business Administratin (IBA)
and Fo·rmer .oo·vernor, State Bank of Pakistan, Karachi.
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Jiusain, Ishrat (1999). The Political Economy of Reforms. Islamabad: Pakistan InStitute of
DeVelopment Econoniics.
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