Intersectoral financial transactions in Pakistan.
Sarmad, Khwaja ; Mahmood, Riaz
I. INTRODUCTION
The impact of the external shocks on Pakistan's development
and on the accumulation balances of institutional sectors during the
past two decades is quite well known. The shifts in the accumulation
balances of institutions are invariably accompanied by changes in the
nature and the magnitude of the claims placed with the financial system
and with the rest of the world. At present, little is known about the
nature of these changes, during this period, nor about the financial
interdependence and the interaction among the private, the public and
the external sectors of the economy. The growing financial problems of
the country require a proper appreciation of the changing importance of
different instruments in the debt portfolio of the government and other
institutions and of the way capital formation is financed.
A number of studies have used the flow-of-funds accounts framework
to analyse the financial problems of developing countries, for example,
[Jansen (1989); Roe (1985) and Bhatt (1972)]. In Pakistan, however, this
subject has not received much attention. This paper is an attempt to
fill this vacuum. It describes sectoral interactions within a
flow-of-funds accounts framework, and distinguishes various channels
through which sectoral accumulation balances come to an equilibrium by
financial flows: intermediation through the formal banking system,
direct capital transfers between institutions, government deficit
financing from borrowing etc. Within this framework the impact of the
changes in investment or in the federal deficit are traced to changes in
the financial behaviour of the other sectors. The paper gives a
presentation of the flow-of-funds accounts designed to understand the
mechanics of financing investment and the government deficit. And helps
to answer questions like what are the components of the federal deficit
and how has its financing change over time? How are the public
enterprises financed? What is the role of the external sector in
domestic financing? and has the private sector been crowded-out as a
result of federal deficit financing?
The analysis in this paper is based on flow diagrams compiled from
the flow-of-funds accounts for the years 1975-76, 1980-81 and 1984-85.
(1) The flow-of-funds accounts suffer from a number of problems
reflected in large internal and external discrepancies; and the reported
figures do not necessarily match with the figures in the other
(official) publications. In view of these problems the focus in this
paper is on the analysis of the main trends in sectoral financial
interactions. The analysis of Pakistan's adjustment experience
elsewhere see Sarmad (1992) suggests that the first two years may be
representative of relatively more stable conditions as compared with
1984-85 when external payments problems became serious, and the
government had to finance a deteriorating fiscal balance. A comparison
of the financial interactions in 1984-85 with those in the previous
years will thus show how the government coped with the situation and how
this affected the financial asset and liability positions of the other
institutions.
The layout of the paper is as follows: Section 2 describes the
framework and methodology of the flow-of-funds accounts; Section 3
presents the consolidated accounts in the format of flow diagrams and
discusses the distinguishing features of the financing process; the
final section presents the summary and conclusions.
II. THE FRAMEWORK OF THE FLOW-OF-FUNDS ACCOUNTS
The flow-of-funds accounts show how savings are allocated to
investment within a sector, and how the surplus is transferred to other
sectors directly or through the intermediation of financial
institutions. The accounts help to trace the impact of the changes in
each sector's financial behaviour on the other sectors and
eventually on the real economy by following the transformation of saving
from lending and financial intermediation into borrowing and real
investment.
The institutional sectors raise funds by issuing claims or lend
surplus funds by accepting claims. The flow-of-funds accounts show for
each sector its gross savings and the net incurrence of liabilities on
the one hand, and investment and the net acquisition of assets on the
other.
The basic flow-of-funds identity comprises the sources of funds of
the sector and its uses. It can be written as:
[S.sub.i] + [SIGMA] [DELTA] [L.sub.ij] = [I.sub.i] + [SIGMA]
[DELTA] [A.sub.ij]
where, S and I are the saving and the investment, [DELTA]A and
[DELTA]L are the newt changes in the assets and the liabilities of the
ith sector with the jth sector. The left-hand side represents the
sources of the funds--i.e. own savings and the net acquisition of
liabilities; and the right-hand side represents the uses of funds--i.e.
the sectoral investment and the net acquisition of financial assets.
The way the above identity is disaggregated depends on the nature
of the problem to be analysed. In this paper, it has been elaborated by
putting into the system the sector and counterpart details of each
transaction and transforming the flow-of-funds into a scheme of
interlocking accounts, presented in Figures 1 to 3, which show the
relationship of the real sectors, which generate the saving and the
investment, with the lending and borrowing activities of the financial
markets. Eight institutional sectors are distinguished: the federal
government, the provincial and local governments and other public
institutions, the non-financial public enterprises, the private
corporate sector, the households and unincorporated business sectors,
the rest of the world, the financial enterprises and the State Bank. (2)
Algebraically, the accounts are described by the equations given
below, where the changes in the net incurrence of liabilities and the
net acquisition of assets are consolidated to derive the net flows from
a sector to its counterpart. Thus, for any sector, the savings plus the
net incurrence of the liabilities minus the net acquisition of financial
assets equals the real investment of the sector:
[S.sub.h] + [DELTA][L.sub.hf] + ([DELTA][L.sub.hg] -
[DELTA][A.sub.hg]) + ([DELTA][A.sub.hpe] - [DELTA][A.sub.hpe]) +
([DELTA][L.sub.ho] - [DELTA][A.sub.ho]) = [I.sub.h] + [DELTA][A.sub.hf]
[S.sub.f] + ([DELTA][L.sub.fh] + [DELTA][A.sub.fh] +
([DELTA][L.sub.fg]) - [DELTA][A.sub.fg]) + ([DELTA][L.sub.fpe] -
[DELTA][A.sub.fpe]) + ([DELTA][L.sub.fo] - [DELTA][A.sub.fo]) =
[I.sub.f]
[S.sub.g] + [DELTA][L.sub.gf] + ([DELTA][L.sub.gh] -
[DELTA][A.sub.gh]) + ([DELTA][L.sub.gpe] - [DELTA][A.sub.gpe]) +
([DELTA][L.sub.go] - [DELTA][A.sub.go]) = [I.sub.g] + [DELTA][A.sub.gf]
[S.sub.pe] + [DELTA][L.sub.pef] + ([DELTA][L.sub.peh] -
[DELTA][A.sub.peh]) + ([DELTA][L.sub.peg] - [DELTA][A.sub.peg]) +
([DELTA][L.sub.peo] - [DELTA][A.sub.peo]) = [I.sub.pe] +
[DELTA][A.sub.pef]
[S.sub.c] + [DELTA][L.sub.cf] + ([DELTA][L.sub.ch] -
[DELTA][A.sub.ch]) + ([DELTA][L.sub.cpe] - [DELTA][A.sub.cpe]) +
([DELTA][L.sub.co] - [DELTA][A.sub.co]) = [I.sub.c] + [DELTA][A.sub.cf]
where the sub-scripts h, g, f, pe, c and o refer to the households
and unincorporated enterprises, government sectors, financial
enterprises, public enterprises, corporate sector and other.
In the Figures 1-3 the arrows indicate the movement of surplus
funds between the sectors and the link between the saving and the
investment through the financial markets. Savings of institutional
sectors, shown in the bottom right-hand corner, are utilised either for
financing own-investment, for acquiring claims on financial
intermediaries, shown in the top right hand corner, or acquiring claims
on the government and corporate sectors, shown in the second (from the
top) block on the left.
The assets acquired by the lenders may take the following forms:
the claims on financial institutions (shown in the top right-hand
corner), which in turn, lend out the funds to the borrowing sectors
(shown in the top left-hand block); claims on the government through the
acquisition of federal securities, claims on the public enterprises, the
private corporate sector and the households and unincorporated
enterprises sector (shown on the left in the first and second block from
the top). The net borrowing of the sectors together with the savings
provides the funds to finance real sectoral investment (shown in the
bottom left hand corner) or the government deficit. The third and fourth
(from the top) blocks on the left present the 'second-order'
lending by the government, showing that the government borrows funds not
just to finance its deficit but also to provide funds to the provincial
government and the public enterprises.
Generally, the causation proceeds from the investment and the
federal government blocks backwards to the saving block directly or via
the financial intermediation block to the saving block.
The analysis ha the following sections focuses on the extent of
self-financing and the debt dependence of the institutional sectors and
the way this has changed over time.
III. THE INTERSECTORAL FLOW OF FINANCIAL RESOURCES
The Figures 1-3 show the direction and the magnitude of the net
flows between the various sectors as well as of the net flows routed
through the financial sectors. The figures show that the intersectoral
financial transactions changed significantly in 1984-85. The main source
of this disturbance is the deterioration in the fiscal balance of the
federal government. While the federal government savings were positive
in 1975-76 and 1980-81 they turned negative in 1984-85 to the extent of
Rupees 5.2 billion. On the other hand, the federal investment more than
doubled from Rupees 3.2 billion in 1974-75 to Rupees 6.8 billion in
1984-85.
[FIGURE 1 OMITTED]
[FIGURE 2 OMITTED]
[FIGURE 3 OMITTED]
The federal deficit (the difference between capital formation and
savings) and lending is financed by the issue of government debt, which
is placed with the banking system, the rest of the world and with the
households. The change in the fiscal balance in 1984-85 implied that the
federal claims placed with these institutions, as well as their
interaction with other institutions underwent significant changes. The
more important changes were the following:
(a) Government total borrowing, which was less than Rupees 15
billion till the early eighties more than doubled to Rupees 34 billion
in 1984-85. A large part (Rupees 5.2 billion) was utilised to meet the
shortfall in the current account; but an overwhelming proportion was
capital transfers to the provincial governments (Rupees 6.4 billion) and
the public enterprises (Rupees 12.6 billion) reflecting a peculiar
feature of the financing process in Pakistan i.e. the federal government
borrows funds to finance its deficit as well as to on-lend funds to the
provincial governments and to the public enterprises. Thus, in a sense,
performing the role of a financial intermediary. Consequently, most of
the federal deficit is attributable to the capital requirements of the
public enterprises. (3)
The main source of funds for the public enterprises is the federal
government. The volume of such funds has increased steadily over time,
though public enterprise savings have financed an increasingly larger
share of total investment i.e. from 25 percent of the total in 1975-76
to 40 percent in 1980-81 and to 58 percent in 1984-85. In contrast,
loans from the rest of the world and from the commercial banks play a
much smaller role in public enterprise finance.
(b) Traditionally, federal government investment and lending have
been financed, in large part, by external capital, while the financial
enterprises and households made smaller contributions. In 1984-85, the
federal deficit increased substantially and its domestic debt portfolio
changed profoundly with more public debt issues held by households. Two
developments-the increase in external capital inflow and the rise in
households savings-provided the resources for financing the federal
deficit and lending in 1984-85. External capital inflow more than
doubled in 1984-85 to Rupees 18 billion as compared with the earlier
years, though external finance was routed via the State Bank and not
provided to the federal government directly, as earlier. At the same
time households savings increased to Rupees 13.5 billion from Rupees 0.8
billion in 1974-75 and Rupees 1.6 billion in 1980-81, reflecting the
spread of small-saver instruments for the sake of mobilising non-bank
savings. Elsewhere see Sarmad (1993) this flow is explained in terms of
the positive response of the households to the high yielding instruments
offered by the government. But the flow diagram in Figure 3 also shows
that the high-yielding T-bills attracted households savings without a
substitution effect on bank savings, which would have led to
crowding-out through the reduction of the credit creating capacity of
the banks. Rather, households savings increased significantly, which
facilitated the flow of funds to the government and provided an even
larger amount for financial intermediation. Domestic bond financing to
cover fiscal deficits avoided the inflationary and the crowding-out
effects but it had a limit since it is done at positive real interest
rates. In subsequent years, the continued reliance on this source of
financing multiplied the interest cost, and the resulting debt service
burden became the main reason for the expanding fiscal deficit.
(c) The flow-of-funds for 1984-85 clearly show the increased level
of interaction between the households and the financial sector not only
did the share of households savings placed with the banking system
increase significantly, despite the large transfer of funds from the
households to the government, the bank credits to the households and
unincorporated enterprises sector also expanded. The increase in the
level of households savings and the growth of the financial
superstructure in the economy appear to be the main reasons for the rise
in the volume of households savings placed with the financial sectors
for intermediation.
A large part of the households savings is routed to the corporate
sector via the financial institutions. In 1984-85, the total amount thus
obtained was Rupees 9 billion. Though there are large discrepancies in
the measurement of this flow the trend is clearly towards a higher
gearing of the private corporate sector; in 1974-75 and 1980-81 it
relied on external funds for 52 percent and 64 percent for its
investment requirements, by 1980-81 this had increased to 68 percent of
the total requirements.
IV. SUMMARY
Using the flow-of-funds framework this paper has provided a
description of how sectoral accumulation balances, and, in particular,
the fiscal balance have attained equilibrium through changing asset and
liability positions of institutions. Despite the limitations of the
data, the analysis has provided useful insights into the changes in the
flow-of-funds that accompanied the shift in the sectoral accumulation
balances in 1984-85.
The paper has shown that the distinct aspect of the flow-of-funds
for 1984-85 is the large federal deficit, stemming from the shortfall in
its current account, and more importantly, from the capital transfers to
the provincial governments and the public enterprises. A peculiar
feature of the domestic financing process is that the federal government
borrows funds to finance its own deficit as well as that of the
provincial governments and of the public enterprises. However, as public
enterprises savings have increased over time the importance of this form
of financing has declined. Yet, the federal deficit is due mainly to the
capital requirements of the public enterprises financed from federal
funds.
The federal deficit and lending have, traditionally, been met from
external finance, but in 1984-85 households' savings have assumed
equal importance. Domestic bond financing of the fiscal deficit avoided
the inflationary effects but led, in subsequent years, to a large debt
service burden. The higher level of households savings provided the
resources for financing the federal deficit and allowed a much higher
volume of households savings to be placed with the financial system for
ultimate lending to deficit sectors.
Comments on "Intersectoral Financial Transactions in
Pakistan"
The paper provides a presentation of the flow of funds accounts
already compiled by the State Bank of Pakistan for FY 76, 81 and 85. The
authors' main observations in the presentation have been (a)
increased fiscal deficit of the Federal Govt. in 84-85 and thereby
larger borrowing, and (b) increased household saving in 84-85, thanks to
high yielding T-bills.
Several observations can be made on the paper. First of all, the
paper is limited to a description of the flow of funds and is devoid of
any flow of fund-based substantive analysis. Practically, the flow of
fund is an instrument having Wide-spectrum applications for economic and
financial analyses. To quote a few, it can be used to check the
complementarity between domestic resource mobilisation and foreign aid;
or the crowding out private sector credit availability by larger
borrowing of the public sector for budget financing. No such application
has been attempted in the paper.
Second, the observation made by the authors that the Federal Govt.
performs the role of a financial intermediary is misleading. In fact,
the expenditures of Provincial Govts. and public sector enterprises are
a part of the budget with its financing being the responsibility of the
Federal Govt. The Federal Govt. has been picking up the revenue deficit
of the Provincial Govts. in the form of non-obligatory grants as well as
providing development assistance to Provinces in the form of domestic
and foreign exchange loans and grants for financing development
expenditure.
Third, the observations made and conclusion drawn by the authors on
the overtime behaviour of the flows is based on absolute (nominal)
values. In this sense, they convey wrong messages and come in conflict
with the general impression about these flows at macro level. Two
examples are worth citing:
(i) The paper points out that Federal deficit increased
substantially in 1984-85. Of course, in absolute figures, the deficit
rose from Rs 12.5 billion in 75-76 to Rs 36.7 billion in 1984-85. But as
a percent of GDP-the usual indicator of fiscal deficit-it fell from 9.6
percent to 7.8 percent.
(ii) The paper observes that household savings increased
significantly in 1984-85. It may be true in nominal terms, but in real
terms or in terms of saving rate, there is hardly any such evidence. In
fact, household saving as percent of GNP fell to 11.2 percent in 1984-85
from 13.5 percent in 1982-83. (1)
Finally, the increase in household saving has been explained by
citing the high interest rate elasticity of saving and high yielding
instruments offered by the Govt. In this context, the authors fail to
document any authentic empirical evidence for high elasticity and
non-existence of substitution. In fact, the persistence of low private
saving rates in Pakistan despite introduction of high yielding National
Saving Schemes is generally explained by a high substitution elasticity
wherein savings rapidly move from a less attractive to a more attractive
portfolio. Incidently, the authors argue that high yielding T. bills
attracted household savings. In reality, there have never been T. bills
open to general public at attractive rates. The yield per annum carried
by ad hoc Treasury Bills for Way and Means was 0.5 percent, T. Bills on
TAP 6 percent, and ad hoc T. Bill for Capital Investment in Railways
5.25 percent.
M. Shaukat Ali
International Economics, Planning Commission, Islamabad.
(1) Mohammad Nishat (1993) Importance of Financial Markets, Micro,
Applied Economics Research Centre. University of Karachi, Karachi, p.
41.
REFERENCES
Bhatt, V. V. (1972) Savings and Flow-of-funds Analysis: A Tool for
Financial Planning. Review of Income and Wealth 17.
Jansen, K. (1989) Financial Development and the Intersectoral
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Roe, A. R. (1985) The Flow-of-funds as a Tool of Analysis in
Developing Countries. In G. Pyatt and J. I. Round (eds) Social
Accounting Matrices: A Basis for Planning. Washington, D.C.: World Bank.
Sarmad, K. (1992) External Shocks and Domestic Adjustment in
Pakistan 1970-1990. The Pakistan Development Review 4: 4.
Sarmad, K. (1993) External Finance and Structural Adjustment in
Pakistan. Paper presented at the Policy Workshop on International
Capital Flows and Economic Adjustment in Developing Countries, December
2-3. The Hague: Institute of Social Studies.
(1) The figures are derived from Pakistan Flow-of-funds
1975-76-1984-85, of the Statistics Department of the State Bank of
Pakistan.
(2) The banks, other monetary and credit institutions and insurance
enterprises have been grouped together into a single sector--financial
enterprises--to highlight their distinct role in the economy as
financial intermediaries between the lending and the borrowing
institutions. The financial institutions also accumulate savings but
their magnitude is small as compared to the savings generated by the
households and the unincorporated businesses.
Khwaja Sarmad is associated with the International Monetary Fund
and Riaz Mahmood is Researh Economist at the Pakistan Institute of
Development Economics, Islamabad.