| "We 
				will seek revival of the IMF programme, and we will, God 
				willing, do belt tightening, and cut PSDP (Public Sector 
				Development Funds)," Ismail told a news conference in Islamabad.
 Ismail said he would be travelling to Washington later in the 
				day to attend an IMF meeting, that will also be attended by 
				Pakistan's central bank governor Raza Baqir, who is already 
				there.
 
 Pakistan is waiting for the IMF to resume talks on its seventh 
				review of the $6 billion rescue package agreed in July 2019.
 
 If the review is approved, the IMF will release over $900 
				million and unlock other external funding.
 
 With a yawning current account deficit and foreign reserves 
				falling to as low as $10.8 billion, the South Asian nation is in 
				dire need of external finances.
 
 A new Pakistani government that took over this month from ousted 
				Prime Minister Imran Khan said it was facing enormous economic 
				challenges, with the fiscal deficit likely to exceed 10% of 
				gross domestic product (GDP) at the end of the current financial 
				year in June ahead of presenting the annual budget.
 
 Hammad Azhar, the energy minister in the Khan government and now 
				his party's focal person on economy, termed Miftah's numbers 
				"complete hogwash."
 
 The new government of Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif also needs 
				to deal with double-digit inflation, and slow growth of the 
				economy, which the IMF said in its latest report was likely to 
				stay at 4% against Pakistan's earlier projection of 4.8%.
 
 The toughest call is to reverse subsidies in oil and power, and 
				defending a blanket tax amnesty Khan gave in the run up to his 
				fall, which Ismail termed was like "planting mines" for the new 
				government.
 
 Sharif's government has for now decided not to roll back an 
				estimated 373 billion Pakistani rupees ($2.1 billion) in 
				subsidies despite the strain on public funds, citing the 
				possible backlash if it were to raise fuel prices just days 
				after taking power.
 
 (Reporting by Asif Shahzad;Editing by Andrew Cawthorne, Kim 
				Coghill and Chizu Nomiyama)
 
 
 
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