Huge weekly outflow takes SBP reserves down to $4.3bn.

KARACHI -- In the absence of any dollar inflows from the International Monetary Fund (IMF) or friendly countries, foreign exchange reserves of the State Bank of Pakistan (SBP) dropped to $4.34 billion, the lowest since February 2014.

The SBP said on Thursday its reserves decreased by $1.23bn during the week ending on Jan 6 due to external debt repayments.

The country has been facing a serious dollar shortage, which is resulting in restricted imports of even food and industrial raw materials. The latest position of foreign exchange reserves reflects that the country doesn't have sufficient dollars to cover even one month of average imports.

Net foreign exchange reserves held by commercial banks amounted to $5.84bn while the total liquid foreign exchange reserves were $10.18bn, data showed.

Reserves have been in sharp decline since the beginning of 2022-23. Analysts expect high inflation and low industrial output in the months ahead as production is being squeezed for the unavailability of imported raw materials.

Manufacturers associated with the Karachi Chamber of Commerce and Industry claimed recently that banks weren't even processing $1,500 payments for the import of spare parts - a phenomenon that's bringing the entire supply chain to a standstill.

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