I entitled an earlier post about Pakistan, the US and the IMF "When Cash & Hate Collide." To underline that assertion, here's Exhibit A: In a recent Pew Global Attitudes poll, the country which assigned the lowest favorable opinion rating to the United States was--wait for it--Pakistan at a ridiculously low 11% [click for a larger image]. It even outdoes places where Amerihatred is keenest based on current events alike Egypt and the Palestinian territories. As for the cash part, in case you haven't read about it, Pakistan recently inked another IMF bailout for $6.6 billion. That's its eighth--that it not a typo--since 1988. Talk about a state of perma-crisis.
Recently I assigned US-Pakistani ties as a term paper topic to my students. They are well aware of what binds these two reluctant "allies": the danger of a failed nuclear state, the constant Taliban menace, and the strategically advantageous location of this country. The truth is that no matter how badly Pakistan mismanages its economy, the US through the IMF will always come to its "rescue":
But, going back to the title of the post, can Pakistan be made to hate the US even more after unauthorized incursions via drone strikes, bin Laden strikes, perceptions of IMF neo-imperialism and so on? You can argue that America's 11% favorable rating has nowhere to go but up. I actually expect that it will in the near future as a "dead cat bounce" phenomenon.
As for IMF lending, I expect the same cycle to repeat itself as it has eight times over the last few decades: Pakistan will try to comply for a while with IMF conditionalities but eventually decide the political price of obsequiously bowing to this American hegemonic institution are too high. After all, if there's a better scapegoat for Pakistani perma-crisis than the IMF with its 11% approval rating by proxy, I don't know what is. Who's more masochistic here, Pakistan or the IMF? Beats me, pal.
Recently I assigned US-Pakistani ties as a term paper topic to my students. They are well aware of what binds these two reluctant "allies": the danger of a failed nuclear state, the constant Taliban menace, and the strategically advantageous location of this country. The truth is that no matter how badly Pakistan mismanages its economy, the US through the IMF will always come to its "rescue":
In 2008, Pakistan agreed to an $11.3bn loan from the IMF to avert a balance of payments crisis. It received $7.6bn but failed to get the remaining $3.7bn because of its slippages in meeting the performance criteria. That led to the suspension of the programme in May 2010. The programme was extended in December 2010 for nine months, but disbursements were not resumed because of the country’s failure to take fiscal measures as demanded by the IMF. Ironically, Pakistan has availed itself of the new $6.6bn loan to repay the old loan to the IMF of which about half – some $4bn – is outstanding [my emphasis].From where I come from, borrowing to repay previous borrowing is called a "Ponzi scheme." Whether the IMF does more harm than good is an open question as the IMF readies fairly harsh conditionalities once more. That said, there is hardly reason to believe that Pakistan can work its way out of trouble on its own despite the constant IMF debt overhang. Misplaced subsidies, huge budget deficits, moribund investment, next to non-existent FDI, lack of basic law and order in most places...Pakistan has almost all the negatives humanly possible.
But, going back to the title of the post, can Pakistan be made to hate the US even more after unauthorized incursions via drone strikes, bin Laden strikes, perceptions of IMF neo-imperialism and so on? You can argue that America's 11% favorable rating has nowhere to go but up. I actually expect that it will in the near future as a "dead cat bounce" phenomenon.
As for IMF lending, I expect the same cycle to repeat itself as it has eight times over the last few decades: Pakistan will try to comply for a while with IMF conditionalities but eventually decide the political price of obsequiously bowing to this American hegemonic institution are too high. After all, if there's a better scapegoat for Pakistani perma-crisis than the IMF with its 11% approval rating by proxy, I don't know what is. Who's more masochistic here, Pakistan or the IMF? Beats me, pal.