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No more dreams as rich-poor divide widening at frightening pace

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No more dreams as rich-poor divide widening at frightening pace

The newspapers and TV screens are bombed with new housing schemes, new eateries serving the elite and upper middle class are being opened, car parking is a problem outside high-end outlets and departmental stores during rush hours, brand new SUVs and convertibles are seen on roads.

On the other hand, there are others who have reduced food intake due to a record-high inflation, once bustling markets with the middle class families are empty, there are long queues of men and women where cooked meal or grocery items are the distribution points.

Both scenario involve real humans living in the same country and city amid the same economic crisis that has triggered inflation and cost of living crisis. Same

Surely, there is something that differentiates the two sets of people. What is this? Ample finances for the first and reduced purchasing power for the second?

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Yes, but there is something more as the cost of living or purchasing power crisis should affect everyone. There is inflation and the prices of all commodities – from food to luxury items – have surged.

If the income of the first set of people has also reduced and they are only spending their savings, then it is incomprehensible because they aren’t stupid. No one would waste money on expensive coffee or imported car or buy a piece of land without a sustained money supply.

So the only thing separating the two is that the elite and the upper middle class still enjoy reliable sources of money even during an economic crisis that has destroyed many lives.

And it is also means that the gap between the rich and the poor is widening – the most frightening consequence of the current turmoil.

Of course, the wealthy classes around the world are acting in the same. China is an example. But it raises another question: for how long they can sustain this crisis or are they immune to it?

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As far as Pakistan is concerned, we need more in depth look into the phenomenon as we don’t have the required industrial base and economic resources.

“Tax amnesty schemes and exemptions are for the rich. The salaried class members start thinking about the next pay cheque even before 15th of the month,” says a citizen, explaining the state of affairs in a clear manner.

It is the government policies like tax breaks and financial incentives that help the wealthy grow their money through financial market investments.

Meanwhile, those not falling in this category are burdened with indirect taxes and higher electricity, gas, petrol and diesel prices with any wage or income growth.

The higher cost of doing business means businesses and industrial units – from small and medium to large – busted. They are either shut down permanently or bought by the others, further leading to concentration of wealth.

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But this cycle doesn’t stop there as the fewer number of businesses in any sector means less competition, exploiting new avenues for exploitation. What we have been witnessing in shape of Big Tech and the banking sector in the developed economies is enough to understand the dynamics.

However, don’t forget looking around you in the market you visit for groceries and other any other item. Even eateries of different nature would help you realise that the concertation of wealth is happening around you right now slowly but surely.

“Till 1980s, even the low-income families would dream about buying a small piece of land to build a new house. But things had already started changing slowly. By the time we reached late 1990s, having land of their own had become impossible for many.”

This man, who was in his 70s, described the state of affairs correctly, adding, “It all came to an end due to the much-glorified Musharraf boom. He snatched even our dreams although a large chunk of the educated urban middle and upper middle thinks otherwise because of being a beneficiary of the bubble.”

He listed two factors for 1980s being a turning point? The effects of Dubai Chalo saga – the remittances sent from the Gulf States – and the jihad money of Zia era became visible to everyone with the skyrocketing land prices.

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Just forget the big cities. Take Abbottabad for an example. A canal of land was available for less than Rs7,000 near the Ayub Medical College in late 1970s. However, the same plot was priced at Rs1.5 million just over 10 years later. Now calculate the difference with the current rate.

In our long journey, we in Pakistan have always left out the weaker during the recent decades. But the unprecedented rate and intensity of the ongoing changes around us certainly make these terrifying.

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Massive reduction in Punjab flour prices, 20kg bag costing Rs1,000 less: Bilal Yasinv

Massive reduction in Punjab flour prices, 20kg bag costing Rs1,000 less: Bilal Yasinv

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Massive reduction in Punjab flour prices, 20kg bag costing Rs1,000 less: Bilal Yasinv

Highlighting a marked decrease in flour prices, Punjab Food Minister Bilal Yasin on Tuesday said the province already had enough wheat stock to meet the entire needs for year.

Yasin said 20 kilogramme flour bag price had decreased Rs1,000 during the past month and was available for Rs1,700 to Rs1,800 in the market. The current rate of 10 kilogramme bag was Rs900, he added.

Read more: Punjab govt promises to implement new bread prices, blasts those criticising the move

In a statement, the provincial food minister also promised to take action against those responsible for the wheat import scandal which has triggered a crisis for the farmers who are unable to get the promised minimum support price of Rs3,900 per 40 kilogramme as the market is offering much lower rates of Rs2,800 to Rs3,200.

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He reiterated the government stance that the crisis was a result of the caretaker government’s decision of wheat import.

About the ongoing probe ordered by Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif by constituting a fact-finding committee, Yasin said the government was determined to make the report public and hold those accountable behind the episode.

NO MORE WHEAT IMPORT?

He said Punjab currently had carry-forward stock of 2.3 million metric tons of wheat, which was sufficient for period till the next wheat crop harvesting in 2024-25.

The statement is very important because of the fact that Pakistan won’t need any wheat import till even during the next fiscal year as the new wheat crop has already arrived in the market, thus saving precious foreign reserves amid the prevailing financial crisis, which would also keep the rupee strong as a result.

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PUNJAB ROTI PRICES

As Punjab Chief Minister Maryam Nawaz from day one has made price control her primary focus, Yasin also talked about the government decision to slash the roti prices.

“Roti and naan are available at the notified rates across Punjab,” said the minister.

Last month, the Punjab government had slashed the bread prices which jumped higher for a long period due to the increase in wheat prices. Roti price is fixed at Rs16 and naan price at Rs20 – a move that produced the desired results despite initial resistance faced during the first week or so.

Yasin mentioned that around 50 per cent of population in Punjab was living in cities and the people from low-income groups were very happy after the reduction in flour prices.

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Tandoor owners to go on strike over Punjab roti prices notification

Tandoor owners to go on strike over Punjab roti prices notification

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Tandoor owners to go on strike over Punjab roti prices notification

Tandoor owners in Punjab have announced a province-wide strike over the issue bread prices as Chief Minister Maryam Nawaz directed the administration to ensure effective implementation of the new rates.

Soon after assuming the office, Maryam had made price control a top priority of her government and the latest orders are a continuation of a series of measure taken in this regard.

Read more: Administration activated for price control, crackdown on hoarders: Maryam

It is the Muttahida Nanbai Association – a representative body of tandoor owners – announced its decision to start strike from tomorrow (Wednesday), saying the Punjab government had failed to meet their demands.

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Its president, Aftab Gul, says the district administration in Lahore isn’t giving any attention to their demand and they are shutting their businesses across Punjab from Wednesday to register their protest.

The tandoor owners are demanding a new notification of bread prices while calling for keeping the naan prices open and providing flour for roti to ensure implementation of government orders regarding fixing Rs16 as roti prices.

On the other hand, the chief minister in a meeting with assistant commissioners from across Punjab on Monday issued directions on different issues, including monitoring the bread prices notification.

The Punjab government is of the view that flour prices have been slashed – a development that must be reflected in the roti and naan rates.

Read more: Massive reduction in Punjab flour prices, 20kg bag costing Rs1,000 less: Bilal Yasin

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It is not just the low-income workers living separately from their families due to their livelihood compulsions but also a large number of households prefer buying bread from tandoors.

In fact, morning breakfast with naan channa is a tradition in the province, as people young and old rush to the eateries to buy their favourite combo.

Also on Tuesday, Punjab Food Minister Bilal Yasin highlighted a marked decrease in flour prices and said the province already had enough wheat stock to meet the entire needs for year.

Yasin said 20 kilogramme flour bag price had decreased Rs1,000 during the past month and was available for Rs1,700 to Rs1,800 in the market. The current rate of 10 kilogramme bag was Rs900, he added.

Yasin also talked about the government decision to slash the roti prices. “Roti and naan are available at the notified rates across Punjab,” said the minister.

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Last month, the Punjab government had slashed the bread prices which jumped higher for a long period due to the increase in wheat prices. Roti price is fixed at Rs16 and naan price at Rs20 – a move that produced the desired results despite initial resistance faced during the first week or so.

Yasin mentioned that around 50 per cent of population in Punjab was living in cities and the people from low-income groups – who worst affected by inflation – were very happy after the reduction in flour prices. 

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Japan warns of action over volatile currency, notes other nations too share the concerns

Japan warns of action over volatile currency, notes other nations too share the concerns

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Japan warns of action over volatile currency, notes other nations too share the concerns

Japan may have to take action against any disorderly, speculative-driven foreign exchange moves, the government’s top currency diplomat Masato Kanda said on Tuesday, reinforcing Tokyo’s readiness to intervene again to support a fragile yen to control inflation.

“It is preferable for exchange rates to remain in a stable manner following fundamentals, and if the market is functioning soundly in this way, there is of course no need for the government to intervene,” Kanda, Japan’s vice minister of finance for international affairs, told reporters.

“However, when there are excessive fluctuations or disorderly movements due to speculation, the market is not functioning and the government may have to take appropriate action. We will continue to take the same firm approach as we have in the past.”

Tokyo is suspected to have intervened on at least two separate days last week to support the Japanese yen after it tumbled to lows last seen more than three decades ago.

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Bank of Japan data suggested authorities spent more than 9 trillion yen ($58.4 billion) in defence of the currency, helping lift the yen from a 34-year low of 160.245 per dollar to a roughly one-month high of 151.86 over the span of a week.

Tokyo is estimated to have spent around $60bn during its last forays in the market to prop up the yen in September and October 2022.

The Japanese yen, which is down nearly 9 per cent on the dollar this year, was last trading around 154.19 in the Asian afternoon [07:39 GMT].

Japan is reluctant to intervene in the currency market considering its limited available dollar cash reserves and US Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen’s comments that such moves were acceptable only in rare circumstances, said Hideo Kumano, chief economist at Dai-ichi Life Research Institute.

“Kanda might have started a verbal warning early on, as he wants to fix the exchange rate pegged at around the lower 150 yen level against the dollar at least until around May 15” when the US consumer price index data comes out, Kumano said.

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YIELD PRESSURE

Kanda, the top Japanese currency diplomat, said it is normal practice for a currency authority to not comment on whether it has carried out market intervention, when asked about recent speculations that Japan has conducted yen-buying interventions.

A weaker yen is a boon for Japanese exporters, but a headache for policymakers as it increases import costs, adds to inflationary pressures and squeezes households.

The yen has been under pressure despite the BOJ’s landmark decision to ditch negative interest rates in March as US interest rates have climbed and Japan’s have stayed near zero.

That dynamic has driven cash out of yen and into higher-yielding assets, with the pressure intensifying in recent months as expectations for Federal Reserve rate cuts receded.

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Kanda noted that a number of countries in addition to Japan had expressed serious concerns about foreign exchange market volatility in a meeting leading up to a ASEAN+3 finance ministers and central bank governors conference in the Georgian capital Tbilisi last week.

ASEAN+3 groups the 10-member Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) as well as Japan, China and South Korea.

“The current concerns are not confined to Japan,” Kanda said. 

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