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Prosperity yet to Trickle Down in Pakistan

The Benefits of Macro-economic Growth yet to Reach the Poor

By Riaz Missen, published Nov 18, 2005
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He wished to enter a street in Aabpaara, Islamabad, but the cops insisted that only private vehicles were allowed. "Why you folks change rules every day to please your ….," he hurled the question right into the face of the policeman but didn't wait for answer and changed his way.

The cab driver, seventy-three, was in good health. He drove me 25 km from a point in Islamabad to my rented-home. He has three sons and works from dawn to dusk along with them to meet bread and butter for his expanding family.

If you can't afford to buy a car, you have to pay daily for your traveling. This is what I am doing for the last five years. Living on the margin of the capital, I have never been able to convince myself that I should utilize the public transport service for the simple reason that minibuses and wagons are overcrowded. I know I can save Rs. 2000 a month but I wish not because many cab drivers wait for me to make their first trip to the heart of the city.

Back in my village in Bahawalpur the one bag of DAP is being sold by the fertilizer dealer at Rs. 1100. My younger brother, one of 95% of farmers who hold only 5% of the cultivatable lands, says recent raise in support price of wheat will only benefit feudals. He complains of his falling share in the canal water due to Punjab government's obsession to increase the size of agricultural lands. He has still to pay a ZTBL's loan he got three years before.

The old man I have just mentioned remembers well the days when Marshal Ayub Khan made his decision to shift Capital to Rawalpindi. The Murree Road, he said, was only six feet wide and there was only one hotel at Committee Chowk. People used to travel on tongaas; cars were rarely visible on the road.

When Islamabad became capital, its roads were better and well managed. These were the days when the political leaders like Zulfiqar Bhutto liked to mix up with people. Sometimes he would visit a tea house in Rawalpindi and chat with the common people. Islamabadites used to line up on the roads to wave their hands to him. "We have got no leader of his stature,"�the old man�said insisting that he was really interested in improving the lot of the poor.

Takeaways
  • The cab driver, seventy-three, was in good health. He works to support his family
  • 95% of farmers hold only 5% of the cultivatable lands in Pakistan
  • Pakistan is hostage to corrupt souls, says a cab driver
Did You Know?
The macro-economic growth of the country has affected the poor sections of the society
Comments
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I see you wrote this is in Nov 2005. Seems that things are just getting worse and worse nowadays with the income gap growing. My neighbors in Defence, Lahore are buying huge generators while the servants who clean and work in the area can no longer even afford rice.

Posted on 07/19/2008 at 10:07:05 PM

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