Pakistan’s national currency hits new historic low at Rs195.74

Pakistan’s national currency hits new historic low at Rs195.74
Money dealers counts Pakistani rupees (R) and US dollars at a currency exchange in Islamabad, Pakistan, on March 12, 2014. (AFP/File)
Short Url
Updated 17 May 2022 15:06
Follow

Pakistan’s national currency hits new historic low at Rs195.74

Pakistan’s national currency hits new historic low at Rs195.74
  • Experts say the situation will improve if Pakistan reaches an agreement with the IMF
  • The PM wants policy makers to devise a strategy to deal with currency depreciation

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s national currency on Tuesday continued to depreciate against the US dollar, closing at Rs195.74 in the interbank market, according to the country’s central bank.

The rupee lost 0.8 percent of its values and breached Rs196 at one point during the day.

According to financial experts, the Pakistani currency is rapidly losing its value due to the rising import bill and shrinking foreign exchange reserves.

Faced with a major current account deficit of $13 billion, the country urgently needs external financing, though the government is reluctant to meet stringent financial conditions imposed by the International Monetary Fund (IMF) to resume a $6 billion loan facility.

“There is uncertainly related to the IMF program which is exerting pressure on the Pak rupee,” Samiullah Tariq, Director Research at Pakistan Kuwait Investment company, told Arab News. “As soon as the agreement with the fund is materialized, the currency market will stabilize.”

Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif held a meeting on Monday in which he instructed policy makers to come up with a comprehensive strategy to deal with the depreciation of the rupee.

He also consulted the top official of the Exchange Companies Association of Pakistan, Malik Bostan, who later told Dawn newspaper the “effects of yesterday’s meeting will soon be seen on the market.”

Bostan said if the government controlled the dollar rate in the interbank market, currency dealers across Pakistan would also manage to bring down its value in the open market.