Ishaq Dar yet to be paid Rs50m salary dues Ishaq Dar, the finance minister, and senator went several months without receiving his pay of Rs50 million on Tuesday. According to parliamentary sources, it has not yet been decided under which heading the minister will receive his or her compensation. However, the Senate Secretariat also denied rumors that the PML-N senator had received the overdue payment. Ishaq Dar yet to be paid Rs50m salary dues The sources revealed that Dar had not also requested payment from the Senate Secretariat for his salary. They added that as Dar was now the finance minister, it fell under the purview of the Cabinet Division to pay his salary. وفاقی وزیر خزانہ اسحاق ڈار اسلام آباد میں میڈیا ٹاک کر رہے ہیں https://t.co/RxWEgMZWfb — PML(N) (@pmln_org) October 7, 2022 Visiting Paris Club for funds would be my last resort: Ishaq Dar Ishaq Dar, the federal minister of finance and revenue, stated on Friday that approaching the bilateral Paris Club creditors for debt relief would be his last resort because rating agencies downgrade the ratings of nations that approach the Paris Club. “We plan on doing business and investors hesitate when countries seek relief from bilateral Paris Club creditors,” Dar said during the interview. Earlier, Dar’s predecessor Miftah Ismail said the country was neither seeking nor there was any need for any relief from commercial banks or Eurobond creditors. “Given the climate-induced disaster in Pakistan, we are seeking debt relief from bilateral Paris Club creditors,” Miftah had said. Commenting on Moody’s decision to downgrade the Government of Pakistan’s local and foreign currency issuer and senior unsecured debt ratings to Caa1 from B3, Dar said that the rating agency adopted a professionally discriminatory stance towards Pakistan. “Our team spoke to the officials of the rating agency and even I spoke to them personally,” he said, adding that he told them that they should have been patient for a few days. He lamented that Moody’s has portrayed an image that shows that, God forbid, Pakistan will default. Regarding his scheduled meeting with the International Monetary Fund (IMF) staff scheduled later this month, Dar said that efforts will be made to fulfill the conditions agreed upon by his predecessors. “I have solutions to present in front of the fund members in order to convince them of my decision regarding the petroleum prices,” he said. Last week, the government slashed the price of gasoline by Rs12.63 per liter, providing huge relief to the nation’s people who were suffering from inflation and raising questions about the ongoing IMF programme. The finance minister clarified the rupee-dollar parity by saying that he was optimistic that the rupee value will decline below the 200-point threshold against the US dollar within the coming days.