Finance Minister Shaukat Tarin has said that the government has no plan to increase the power tariff immediately.

In his interaction with American think tank US Institute of Peace in Washington, he said that before increasing the electricity tariff, the government will take measures to contain inflation in the country.

The Pakistan government is in contact with the International Monetary Fund (IMF) on the matter, he added.

Tarin said that the government was reforming the country’s economy. Steps were being taken to privatise loss-making state-owned enterprises to reduce the financial burden, he continued.

The government has put the country’ economy on the right track, he said and hoped that Pakistan’s growth rate will exceed by 5 percent. The country will soon receive IMF’s sixth installment, Tarin added.

The finance minister said that Islamabad wanted friendly relations with both China and the US, adding that Pak-China cordial ties should not have an impact on Pak-US relations.

Pak-US relations should be viewed from an economic perspective rather than just security, he added.

The minister said that Pakistan also wanted friendly relations with all neighbouring countries, including India. Kashmir is the bone of contention between Islamabad and New Delhi, he said.

Talking about Afghanistan, Tarin said that the Taliban’s government in Afghanistan is a reality and Washington will have to understand that the Taliban need aid on humanitarian grounds.

If the world abandons Afghanistan, it might be affected with expected anarchy, he said, adding that in this situation, Pakistan would be the most affected country.

Tarin said that Pakistan has addressed 26 out of the 27 action items of the Financial Action Task Force (FATF).

“Pakistan is being punished by some countries,” he said, adding that if this was any other country, it would have been removed from the grey list a long time ago.

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