Zafar Iqbal
| Date of Ph.D. defense: | September 9, 1996 |
| Title of thesis: | Three-Gap Analysis of Structural Adjustment in Pakistan |
| ISBN: | 90 5668 017 X |
| Promotors: | Prof. Jeffrey James and Graham Pyatt |
Abstract:
This study addresses two specific sets of questions. The first main question that has occupied a
number of researchers is whether the adjustment programmes (advocated by the World Bank and
the International Monetary Fund) have had any positive effects to date on macroeconomic
performance (i.e. on exports, imports, savings, investment, consumption, and gross domestic
product) in Pakistan. The second main question posed here is whether and to what extent
external factors aggravated the adjustment process. The purpose of this study has accordingly
been to provide systematic quantitative evidence on these fundamental questions, using 1970
to 1993 as the period of observation. We use a three-gap framework to explore the
contributions to macroeconomic performance of the adjustment policy reforms and external
shocks. The individual and collective effects of adjustment policies and external shocks are
measured through a number of simulation experiments. The central finding of the study is that
in broad terms, the adjustment programmes resulted in a substantial improvement in
macroeconomic performance of Pakistan's economy. Furthermore, the adverse effects
associated with external shocks appeared to have been severe during the adjustment process.

Global / English