ghazi52
THINK TANK: CONSULTANT
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The government has been restructuring the PSDP portfolio on the IMF prodding to improve project selection, but even the Fund has been unable to restrict allocations for parliamentarians’ constituency schemes under the so-called Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) Achievement Programme (SAP) that has claimed Rs70bn for the current year.
The government has given a commitment to the IMF to continue to improve project selection criteria and streamline the project pipeline to “better focus PSDP on long-term capital spending”.
“With careful reprioritisation, we have streamlined the PSDP pipeline by Rs2.5tr (around 25pc of the total). We will cap new project allocations to 10pc of the total in the FY27 budget,” the finance minister said in a written undertaking.
He also pledged further improvements to a scorecard-based system for project selection, including reducing overlapping criteria, introducing negative marking for projects with negative externalities and increasing the weight for climate-related criteria.
The IMF also noted that the government would reduce or postpone spending in response to lower revenues linked to the implementation of the National Tariff Policy. “As in the past, contingent and development spending are most likely to be affected,” it said.
This, it added, explained low development spending in the first five months of the current fiscal year (July-November), with utilisation at 9.2pc of the Rs1tr annual allocation amid fiscal rationing to meet IMF contingency measures against growing revenue shortfalls.
The government has given a commitment to the IMF to continue to improve project selection criteria and streamline the project pipeline to “better focus PSDP on long-term capital spending”.
“With careful reprioritisation, we have streamlined the PSDP pipeline by Rs2.5tr (around 25pc of the total). We will cap new project allocations to 10pc of the total in the FY27 budget,” the finance minister said in a written undertaking.
He also pledged further improvements to a scorecard-based system for project selection, including reducing overlapping criteria, introducing negative marking for projects with negative externalities and increasing the weight for climate-related criteria.
The IMF also noted that the government would reduce or postpone spending in response to lower revenues linked to the implementation of the National Tariff Policy. “As in the past, contingent and development spending are most likely to be affected,” it said.
This, it added, explained low development spending in the first five months of the current fiscal year (July-November), with utilisation at 9.2pc of the Rs1tr annual allocation amid fiscal rationing to meet IMF contingency measures against growing revenue shortfalls.




