Forbes Asia — October 2017

(Marcin) #1

CHIEF PRODUCT OFFICER Lewis D’Vorkin


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FORBES ASIA

SIDELINES


EDITOR-IN-CHIEF
Steve Forbes

T


wo fateful Islamist up-
risings shook the world
in the late 1970s. The
more recognized one was led
by Ayatollah Khomeini in Iran.
The other was General Zia-ul-
Haq’s coup d’état in Pakistan,
which turned the long creep
away from the country’s secular
origins into a gallop. During
Zia’s reign, Pakistan’s nuclear-
bomb aims were realized, and
the world has been an edgier place since.
Today it’s as hard as ever to gauge Pakistani progress toward being a modern,
peaceable state. The timeless animosity with Hindu India shows little abeyance,
aggravated as always by the handling of Kashmir and no doubt fueled by the rise
of fundamentalists in Indian politics. Superpower relations continue their histori-
cal influence: The U.S., weary of Islamabad’s perceived duplicities (exemplified by
the quartering of Osama bin Laden), has snubbed its role in Afghanistan while
China—a friend for decades, as a foe of India—is pouring billions into Belt &
Road investments.
Pakistan’s long-underwhelming economy has shown renewed zest (a record
five domestic companies appeared on our Best Under A Billion list this year), but
that masks imbalances: A surplus of imports threatens the rupee and may trigger
another IMF bailout.
Behind the long-term lag in Pakistan’s GDP lies the intrusion of the military
into internal affairs, regional rivalries (Sindh versus Punjab), the waste of human
development in Zia-fostered Wahhabi madrassas and the never-ending strife among
the nation’s political clans. Lately this last factor has brought the removal of prime
minister Nawaz Sharif in favor of his party’s Shahid Khaqan Abbasi—all the while
trolled by opponent Imran Khan, a verbal flamethrower against the Americans.
Abbasi made the rounds at September’s UN meetings in New York, advancing
the familiar Pakistani line that everything, including security of the nuclear arms,
is just fine, Jack. A long, lamentable record of instability, punctuated by the part
that Pakistan and China played in North Korean proliferation, does not attest to
the PM’s pat assurances. Results will speak louder.

Problematic Pakistan


Tim Ferguson
Editor, forbes asia
[email protected] MUHAMMAD REZA/ANADOLU AGENCY/GETTY IMAGES

6 | FORBES ASIA OCTOBER 2017


PM Abbasi emerged from latest political scrum.
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