Pakistani Prime Minister Shaukat Aziz has ordered a probe into rumours of his resignation that triggered a stock market crash even as an analyst said the incident "raised fundamental questions about Pakistan's wider economic trends".
"I have asked the Securities and Exchange Commission of Pakistan (SECP) and other agencies to file an investigation report of the whole affair," Aziz said at a press conference in his National Assembly chamber.
"You should dismiss rumours of my resignation and move on," Aziz added.
The Karachi Stock Exchange (KSE) had gained 286.7 points Tuesday, a day after the budget was presented, but rumours of Aziz's resignation led to selling pressure Wednesday and the index declined 127.6 points.
"The speculation led to an erosion of Rs.110 billion ($1.8 billion) in market capitalisation, but it recovered towards close of the session," the economist prime minister said.
The KSE index was up 43.46 points Thursday on cautious buying.
"It's clear that a small group of investors found it convenient to spread malicious rumours about the prime minister in the hope of reaping windfall gains," Farhan Bokhari, contributing editor of The News, wrote in Friday's edition in an analysis headlined "The politics of stocks".
"The happenings around the stock market must also raise fundamental questions about Pakistan's wider economic trends. There are fewer companies listed on the stock market today than five or seven years ago, which essentially raises questions over the centrality of the stock market to Pakistan's investment future," he maintained.
"In spite of higher economic growth rates which have taken Pakistan to the category of near robust Asian economies, the truth simply remains that the market is hardly an active vehicle for investors to raise capital.
"The medium to long term future of the Pakistani economy must be decided by important parameters such as the scale of its developmental process, the success or lack of it in driving forward reforms tied to governance, and the ways in which political continuity or change affects the lives of its grass roots population," he argued.
Noting that questions on issues of governance had come up time and again, Bokhari said that since Aziz first came to office as the finance minister five years ago, Pakistan has seen repeated official commitments on improving the quality of government and governance.
"But the quality of life for the average grief stricken Pakistani remains largely unchanged... Pakistanis still find themselves surrounded by a culture of nepotism and corruption, which ultimately affects the ways in which a credible and progressive development agenda moves forward.
"Pakistan's two mainstream political parties remain out in the cold while the ruling Pakistan Muslim League created in the good name of the late Quaid-e-Azam Mohammad Ali Jinnah is far from establishing a national foothold.
"The core of the country's economy and its workings simply cannot be isolated from ways in which its politics work. Wednesday's crash of the stock market may well have been avoided if indeed there was a stable political structure, placed in charge of Islamabad," Bokhari maintained.
Harvard students condemn Oxford University
Publish Date : 3/5/2007 7:11:00 AM
Two Harvard students, including an NRI, have condemned Oxford University, where they are Rhodes scholars, as "outdated" and "frustrating" and dismissed its world famous Bodleian library as "less than inspiring".
Indian embassy to outsource jobs to American firm
Publish Date : 3/5/2007 7:10:00 AM
After taking thousands of American jobs through outsourcing, India is planning to give a few back. The Indian embassy in the US capital is planning to outsource processing of visas to a US-based company.
Badal heads 18-member coalition ministry in Punjab(Final lead: Badal)
Publish Date : 3/3/2007 7:29:00 AM
Octogenarian leader of the Shiromani Akali Dal (SAD) Parkash Singh Badal, on Friday took oath as Punjab's new Chief Minister and will lead an 18-member SAD-Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) coalition ministry.
Bareilly eunuch adopts a girl child
Publish Date : 3/3/2007 7:22:00 AM
It was a day of celebration for Saroj, a eunuch in Bareilly in Uttar Pradesh, as 'she' has become a 'mother' by adopting a baby girl.
Kalam offers prayer at Fatehpuri Masjid
Publish Date : 3/3/2007 7:16:00 AM
Keeping a promise made two years ago, President A P J Abdul Kalam today offered prayers at the historic Fatehpuri Masjid in Chandni Chowk here along with thousands of Muslims.
Union Budget directionless, says Modi
Publish Date : 3/1/2007 8:41:00 AM
Gujarat Chief Minister Narendra Modi today criticised the Union Budget by terming it as "directionless".
Centre allocates over Rs 100 crore for minority zones
Publish Date : 3/1/2007 8:38:00 AM
Unfazed by the BJP's criticism over its welfare schemes for Muslims, the Congress-led Central Government has allocated over Rs 100 crore for development programmes in select districts with a sizeable population of minorities.
Kins of political bigwigs fail to find voters' favour
Publish Date : 3/1/2007 8:27:00 AM
The assembly polls in Punjab turned out to be unkind for several kins of political bigwigs as voters rejected most of them barring some of Shiromani Akali Dal (SAD) supremo Parkash Singh Badal's near and dear ones.
High Court order on age of nursery admission tomorrow
Publish Date : 3/1/2007 8:24:00 AM
The Delhi High Court today observed that the city Government's submission that a child should be four-years-old to get admission in nursery class was contrary to the law.
Parliament session may be stormy tomorrow on Quattrocchi issue
Publish Date : 3/1/2007 8:18:00 AM
After the lull, it is going to be storm again in Parliament tomorrow.
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