Dr.
Nadeem ul Haque Deputy Chairman Planning Commission of Pakistan in his
opening remarks said that we have a young and growing population. Around 68% of
Pakistan ’s
population is regarded as youth (under 30 years). Many of them are now coming into the labor
force, increasing the size of the workforce by over 3 per cent annually. We
estimate that to employ this youth we require the economy to grow at more than
7% consistently for 20 years. For this we need a major rethink. The current
strategy of growth through a series of projects without focusing on
institutions and policies for growth is not working since is it is not
delivering the required sustained growth. And that is why we must rethink.
“Framework
for Economic Growth, Pakistan is a new approach to accelerating
economic growth and sustaining it. It has been developed with world renowned
experts and all the stakeholders following extensive research and consultation.
Our consultations clearly identified the need to develop a coherent approach to
growth that goes well beyond projects and targets public service delivery,
productivity, competitive markets, innovation and entrepreneurship. The
strategy is based on sustained reform that builds efficient and knowledgeable
governance structures, and markets in desirable, attractive and well-connected
locations. It recognises the severe resource constraint that the country faces
and therefore focuses on ‘productivity’— improving the efficiency with which
assets are used. Global indicators such as ‘competitiveness’ and ‘cost of doing
business’ also highlight factors such as ‘management’, ‘innovation’, ‘quality
of regulation and governance’ and ‘research and development’, as the more
immediate constraints to growth. The thrust of this strategy, therefore, is to
focus on the ‘software’ of economic growth (issues of economic governance,
institutions, incentives, human resources, etc.) so as to provide an
environment in which the ‘hardware’ of growth (physical infrastructure) could
be expanded and made more productive at every level” said Dr. Nadeem ul Haque.
Isloooboy with Dr. Ashfaq in Conference |
It conference was inaugurated by Dr. Nadeem ul
Haque, Deputy Chairman Planning Commission and Assistant Secretary General of
the UN, Ajay Chhiber. International and national resource persons include Sulaiman B. Mahbob, Chairman, Malaysian Industrial
Development Authority, Norma Binte Mansor Secretary General of the
National Economic Advisory Council Malaysia, Mohammed
Ali Chairman Securities & Exchange Commission of Pakistan, Shahid
Kardar Governor State Bank of Pakistan, Heru Prasetyo Deputy
Chairman of the President’s Delivery Unit for Development Monitoring and
Oversight Indonesia, Vinaya Swaroop Sector Manager of Economic Policy in South
Asia World Bank, Dr. Andrew Rathmell Coffey International Development, Mahbub
Hossain Executive Director, Bangladesh Rural Advancement Committee and many
others related to the economic and social development sectors from across
Pakistan.
The conference deliberations
focused on civil service and governance reforms, the role of vibrant markets
and results-orientation in the public sector. Leading experts also discussed
the need for urban development and reform as a pre requisite to robust growth
while maximizing human capital, productivity and innovation. The interactive
sessions also reiterate the need for youth engagement as the drivers for
growth.
isloooboy with Dr. Nadeem ul Haq, Ajay Chibber, Abdullah Yosuf |
In
his introductory remarks Ajay Chhibber, Assistant Secretary General of the UN
and Assistant Administrator UNDP, said that Pakistan
at present faces numerous development and economic challenges “Pakistan needs bold new approaches to seek
sustainable and inclusive development and discussions held in this conference
will affect Pakistan ’s
future profoundly and positively ”, he said.
Earlier, welcoming the participants, the
Deputy Chairman of the Planning Commission,
Dr. Nadeem Ul Haque stated (please put DC’s quote here)
At the conclusion of the
Conference, the Planning Commission and UNDP will be exchanging a letter of
intent proposing the establishment of the Centre for Growth and Development.
The revamped centre will
contribute towards building institutional capacity to support the
implementation of the new Economic
Growth Framework. It will conduct research, advocacy and policy advice,
promote global learning and solution exchange.
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