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Pakistan Failed state?

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These days you often get lot of negative publicity directed toward Pakistan. Various self serving "Think Tanks" have garnered their own figures and built oft repeated claim of Pakistamn being failed state. So let us look at what makes Pakistan just another Somalia on the Indus Basin.

No.1 - Social Security

Pakistan is the only country in South Asia that provides income support to poor familes along the lines of welfare support found in wealthy Western European countries. The foundation of welfare state was established back in 1980 under the Islamic Ordinance of Zakat which required between 2.5% to 5% tax on the wealthy that went to widows and needy. By 1983 upto Rs2.5 billion was being disbursed to about 4 million people. However the system was inefficient and the Zakat Committees assigned to select familes were accused of favoritism. Despite this it was still the begining of social welfare and many a widow or elderly with no family to support them survived on the Zakat payments.

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However in 2008 Pakistan government launched the ambitious national Benazir Income Support Programme (BISP) which is non-conditional cash payment every month as income support for the poor. The amount set for 2015 is Rs1,500 which allows a family of 5-6 to buy enough flour to last 25 days. All claimant's recieve BISP ATM Cards through which the money is debited to their accounts. A additional premium of Rs1,200 is added to mother's for each child in primary school to the maximum of 3 children.

Eligibility


In order to be eligible for cash payments under BISP, families must earn less than RS 6,000 per month; equivalent to $67.[1] Further eligibility requirements stipulate that:


  • Families must have a female applicant holding a valid ID card
  • An individual applicant must be a widowed or divorced female without male family members
  • Eligible families include those with physically or mentally disabled individuals

Families deemed ineligible for cash payments through BISP include those with:[1]


  • Members employed by the Pakistani government, army, or any other government-affiliated agency
  • Members drawing a pension or receiving post-retirement benefits from the government
  • Family members owning more than 3 acres of farmland or more than 80 square yards of residential land
  • Members receiving income from other sources
  • Members holding a machine readable passport
  • Members with a National Identity Card for Overseas citizens
  • Members with a bank account excluding microfinance banks and those catering to low-income families

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The allocation for the financial year 2014-15 is over $1 billion ( Rs100 billion ) to provide cash assistance to 5.5 million families, which constitutes almost 20% of the entire population. The Program aims to cover almost 40% of the population below the poverty line. The $1 billion forms significant amount of the federal budget this does though indicate a change from security state to welfare state.

Stats and facts

BISP provides direct financial assistance to poor families through monthly cash payments to buy essential household items such as food and medicine, and to send children to school. A female representative of the family receives these cash transfers directly on the BISP debit card, helping them to participate in domestic decision-making.

Payments are currently being made to 5 million families (benefiting 30 million individuals). The BISP income support is expected to reach 50 million or 7 million familes by 2017. The introduction of the BISP debit card has helped the cash payments reach the poorest and most vulnerable.

Check-BISP-Online-Tracking-System-information.png


BISP conducted countrywide Poverty Survey/Census for the first time and collected the data of almost 180 million people and 27 million households using GPS devices for the informed decision making (to cope with natural disasters and other emergencies). The poverty census completed in record time of one year across all Pakistan including Azad Jammu & Kashmir, Gilgit-Baltistan and FATA. The World Bank and UK DFID was involved in the preparing the structure of BISP working with Pakistan government.

Overall the cross party consensus is that the BISP named in honour of the late ex PM Benezir Bhutto who was killed by Taliban in 2007 has been extremely succesfull. There were problems as in 2008 the monthly payments were made via Post Office but soon reports came that Post Men were charging money from the poor female claimants to cash money. Therefore BISP Debit card was introdiced and now all claimants recieve their payments through the BISP Debit card.

upload_2015-6-17_1-6-17.jpeg


Benazir Income Support Program (BISP) ran by a independent federal authority — patronized by President and Prime Minister and managed by a high powered Board headed by its Chairperson —through the Act of the Parliament in 2010. The present minster of BISP is Ms Marvi Memon.

More than 7 million beneficiary families have been identified through Poverty Scorecard Survey for disbursing Rs1500/month through ‘branchless banking system’ (Smart Card, Mobile Phone, Debit Card). The focus on poverty alleviation through empowering the women, BISP has so far disbursed more than Rs346 billion to the deserving and needy of the country with relative transparency in about 4 years time through the elected representatives of the people, regardless of their party affiliation. Various studies done thus far show that the system is delivering to the end customer- the poor claimant.

At 12 per cent of the minimum wage, the cash transfer will remain too low to distort the incentive to work or create a ‘dependency culture’. And to ensure effectiveness, the poverty scorecard survey will need to be rerun every few years.

Further improvements now in the pipeline are Waseela-e-Taleem Program, initiated with generous help of the World Bank and DFID, to send 3 million children to school through additional cash incentives of Rs.200 per child. Payments at the moment do not require claomants to send children to school but this is about to change as attendance below 80% will result in reductions of BISP.

bisp%2Bmono.jpg


Chart from the Economist showing the relative position of Pakistan's on spending on welfare compared to some other countries. As can be seen Pakistan is now spending nearly 16% of GDP on social welfare secondly only to Malaysia at 26%.

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*A ‘welfare state’ for Pakistan’s poor? - The Express Tribune
*Pakistan strives to become a welfare state
*Pakistan: reaching the poorest through cash transfers - Case study - GOV.UK
*Social Safety Nets and Poverty in Pakistan (A Case Study of BISP in Tehsil Mankera District Bhakkar)
*http://www.economist.com/news/asia/...fare-states-spread-themselves-thinly-widefare
*Benazir Income Support Programme - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

I have tried to only include reputable links above. Some are from United Kingdom's DFID, others from Economist and one from research paper on BISP. Without a doubt BISP has been a relative success and one of the few great things Pakistan has achieved in the last decade.

As can be seen World Bank, USAID, UK DFID, ADB have all joined in with Ministry of Finance, Gov., of Pakistan which underlies the success of this project since 2008. Indeed new schemes like cash grants for setting up business or vocational training have been launched to prevent people becoming dependant on welfare culture.

Below is the actual link to BISP website of the government agency handling income support payments.

*Benazir Income Support Programme

CORRECTION: The BISP payment rate for 2015 is Rs1,500 per month.
 

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Its really sad to see that some senior members including some elite ranks holders have this habit of self-bashing and self pity that you will never hear anything positive from them for Pakistan, Pakistani or for Muslims. They are very much like Hasan nisar who only wish to see everything from one angle which is negative angle. I am all for constructive criticism but just too much self hate or self-pity just demoralize a nation
 
Benazir support program is nothing but an organized effort to turn people into baggers. There is a Chinese proverb that translates something like: dont give them fish, teach them to catch fish. With this 'Benazir' crap program, we are only creating an army of nikammey and haram khour and in return we are asking for votes. Compared to that, Dr Amjad Saqib's NGO 'Akhuwat' is doing a great job by distributing interest-free loans and helping people to start their own businesses. Over 95% loans are returned back and many who benefited from those loans initially are now donors of 'Akhuwat', subhanAllah.
 
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Its really sad to see that some senior members including some elite ranks holders have this habit of self-bashing and self pity that you will never hear anything positive from them for Pakistan, Pakistani or for Muslims. They are very much like Hasan nisar who only wish to see everything from one angle which is negative angle. I am all for constructive criticism but just too much self hate or self-pity just demoralize a nation

No it is not. The title is sarcasm. I am sorry if you managed not to see that. Although I would not call this thread self bashing but in itself "self bashing" is not by definition bad. Only by doing so does one learn and move forward to sorting out the flaws.

@syedali73 Not at all. BISP is a organized effort at letting the common people stick their snouts where the elite and middle classes already have done. PIA, KPT, KEC and all other public sectors are just piggy banks for the employees who just milch these organizations. All BISP does is allows the poor a small share of the pie. What the hell is wrong with that?

In the west it is called capital redistribution. The rich, the connected already do it by milching the public sector. BISP gives the commoners a tiny oppurtunity.
 
No it is not. The title is sarcasm. I am sorry if you managed not to see that. Although I would not call this thread self bashing but in itself "self bashing" is not by definition bad. Only by doing so does one learn and move forward to sorting out the flaws.
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No dude, i was not referring to your OP but attitude of some senior Pakistani members here who are very much pessimist.
 
Pakistan is not a failed state, whoever say so needs to get their head examined, or they are clear enemies of Pakistan.
 
Anyone who say Pakistan is a "failed state" is either blind or stupid.
It depends on how we define a failed state. You see, in stats we have something called p value or probability value. We define which p number should be considered as significant and which not, depending on sample size etc. So it is pretty much like that. For certain people who set the bar high, it is a failed state, those who set the bar low, it is not. Compared to Sudan, Yemen, Iraq, Syria, Libya etc, Pakistan is definitely not a failed state.
 
These days you often get lot of negative publicity directed toward Pakistan. Various self serving "Think Tanks" have garnered their own figures and built oft repeated claim of Pakistamn being failed state. So let us look at what makes Pakistan just another Somalia on the Indus Basin.


*Benazir Income Support Programme

No offence meant & in lighter vein..

Two points .. Are you a PPP supporter ?

Everything is Benazir....Going by the data provided it would appear that " Benazir' is not a failed state !
 
Very successful state that's why OP left it and me too, and many on PDF who have posted above.. wow
 
It depends on how we define a failed state. You see, in stats we have something called p value or probability value. We define which p number should be considered as significant and which not, depending on sample size etc. So it is pretty much like that. For certain people who set the bar high, it is a failed state, those who set the bar low, it is not. Compared to Sudan, Yemen, Iraq, Syria, Libya etc, Pakistan is definitely not a failed state.

Like you said it depends where you set the bar. If you set it high enough that Pakistan's falls short of that the pass mark I suspect so would 25% of the world. However for political reasons 'failed' is often used in particular by our neighbour which of course is gross since we all know how 100s of millions of them live in abject poverty.

No offence meant & in lighter vein..

Two points .. Are you a PPP supporter ?

Everything is Benazir....Going by the data provided it would appear that " Benazir' is not a failed state !

No I am not a PPP supporter. The initiative is named after her and since she is dead it is not partisan anymore. What do you mean everything? Just the name of the scheme is Benezir that hardly means 'everything'.

@Shan-e-ibrahim Unlike you I have the decency of revealing my country of origin. You of course being a Ganga dweller hide behind Pakistani flag. On me leaving my country last time I checked there are millions more Indian's living abroad then Pakistani and more would leave if only they could afford the air tickets ...

* Just to clarify I am more inclined toward PTI so this is not my attempt at embelishing PPP. Like I said BISP is now non partisan and although named after late Benezir she has my respects. Let the dead lie in peace.
 

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