Pakistan’s new government may improve ties with U.S. and India
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Pakistan’s parliament picked Shehbaz Sharif as the country’s new prime minister, just days after his predecessor Imran Khan was ousted in a no-confidence vote.
Aamir Qureshi | AFP | Getty Images
Pakistan has a new prime minister — and this could augur well for the South Asian country’s return to a healthier economy and its relations with its traditional supporter, the U.S., as well as its rival, India.
On Monday, Pakistan’s parliament picked Shehbaz Sharif as the country’s new prime minister, just days after his predecessor Imran Khan was ousted in a no-confidence vote.
In what one observer called the “affirmation of democracy,” the move was by no means inevitable in a country where no prime minister has served a full term in office.
Surprising observers, the all-powerful Pakistan army, which has ruled the country for decades by staging coups, stayed in the barracks.
A decisive intervention by the judiciary was the next surprise. The Pakistan Supreme Court ruled that the government of Imran Khan had to face a no-confidence vote that it had tried to block. Khan eventually lost the re-scheduled trust vote in the early hours of Sunday and was removed from office.
What will Sharif do?
Pakistan is on its 23rd bailout from the IMF. The country’s economy is under pressure from rising inflation, at over 10% this year, amid spiraling prices of crude oil and other commodities after the war in Ukraine.
“Under his watch, Pakistan is likely to negotiate another loan with the IMF and will need to commit to structural reforms and generate more tax revenue,” Sevea said. “The task is all the more difficult given that he will need to do this without seeming to be cutting subsidies and going against welfare policies.”
Sharif is a known figure internationally, according to James Schwemlein, a senior director at the Washington-based Albright Stonebridge Group, who pointed to his reputation as a capable administrator.
“Shehbaz Sharif ran Pakistan’s largest province, Punjab. He did so largely developing a very positive effect with business. He was responsible for significant infrastructure investment. He’s well known to all of the international interlocutors — whether they be American or Chinese,” he said.
India: Improved relations?
U.S.: Repairing ties
The key priority for the new government would be to fix ties with Washington, analysts said.
Khan had departed from the traditional pro-U.S. establishment position to pursue a markedly different foreign policy, and embraced China’s Belt and Road projects, Schwemlein told CNBC’s Asia Squawk Box.
Calling his antagonism to the U.S. “dangerous” for Pakistan, he told CNBC on Monday: “The dream for Pakistan is that they can export to China. The reality for Pakistan is that they export to the U.S. and Europe.”
Pakistan’s economic fortune has been largely tied to maintaining positive relations with the West but Khan “acted against that,“ Schwemlein said.
It is likely that the new Sharif government will align itself more closely to the U.S.
China: Strategic ties
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