Fighting price hike

Author: Daily Times

The most pressing task for the government should be to control prices of essential items and to bring down the overall inflation rate. Instead of going for some practical measures and rapid fire fighting, Prime Minister Imran Khan has made a special cell for integrated planning on demand and supply of essential commodities to control their prices. Such customary measures are likely to take several rounds in file work, bringing little relief to the common man. For such reasons, the government’s core economic team — Adviser on Finance Dr Abdul Hafeez Shaikh, Minister for Economic Affairs Hammad Azhar and Federal Board of Revenue Chairman Shabbar Zaidi – faced hostile questions at a press conference where they were to explain government policies on the pricing front. For several months, the inflation rate has been in double figures resulting in an unprecedented increase in prices of kitchen items, particularly vegetables and fruits. The prices of tomatoes, sugar, wheat flour, onions and potatoes have gone up manifold. Tomato is being sold at Rs250 to Rs300 per kg in the market. Not many will be relieved by technocrat Shaikh’s marvels like zero borrowing from the State Bank or no currency printing over the past four months, if their trickle-down effect has not reached the grass root.

The economic slowdown and rising inflation charts have their worst impact on salaried, low-middle and poor classes. The impact is visible as every sector is suffering from layoffs, salary delays and wage cuts. To rub salt in their wounds, prices of energy, medicines, and daily household items have gone up at 8.7 per cent year-on-year and 1.1 per cent on a monthly basis. Every sector blames the drop of rupee value for build-up of inflation. The National Price Monitoring Committee recently held the recent increase in gas prices responsible for making inflation a big challenge. The government justifies the price hike by citing ever increasing losses of utility companies. Measures like plugging leakages and controlling theft would have made utility companies profitable but the government took the easiest way of passing on the burden on to consumers. Similarly, the drastic devaluation of the currency at a time when world economies were unstable proved to be disastrous. The government at least can minimise the impact of inflation through strict price monitoring.

In Punjab, the government has decided to benefit from online technology to fight the price hike and has developed a Qeemat App, which will connect the buyer with the wholesale dealer. In the home delivery regime, buyers will get commodities at original prices. Other provinces should also go for such creative solutions. *

Share
Leave a Comment

Recent Posts

  • World

China urges US not to interfere in its internal affairs

  BEIJING (Xinhua) -- Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi held talks with U.S. Secretary of…

12 hours ago
  • Top Stories

Petition filed against Maryam Nawaz for donning Police uniform

The Punjab Chief Minister, Maryam Nawaz, stirred controversy as she participated in a passing-out parade…

12 hours ago
  • Top Stories
  • World

Hamas officials say group willing to disarm if Palestinian state is established

Some Hamas officials are signaling that the militant group could give up armed struggle against…

12 hours ago
  • Business

Gold price per tola increases Rs500 in Pakistan

Gold prices advanced in Pakistan on Thursday, in line with an increase in the international…

13 hours ago
  • Business

Rupee sheds 9 paisa against dollar

Pakistani Rupee on Thursday depreciated by 09 paisa against the US dollar in the interbank…

13 hours ago
  • Business

WB Director urges ‘bold’ fiscal reforms for Pakistan’s macroeconomic stability

World Bank's (WB) Global Director for Governance Arturo Herrera Gutierrez on Thursday stressed the need…

13 hours ago