pakistan, a leaderless leader in economic growth potential among emerging markets paper
DESCRIPTION
When those who are given the mandate to govern, make the country ungovernable then the only way out for the civil society is to lead the way to show the leaders that those who are mislead can lead too when the time comes. It is far more important to self-govern than handing over the right to govern to those who cannot see beyond their nose.TRANSCRIPT
Pakistan, a leaderless leader in economic growth
potential among Emerging Markets… Pakistan’s Image and Repositioning Pakistan
When those who are given the mandate to govern, make the country ungovernable then the only way out for the civil society is to lead the way to show the leaders that those who are mislead can lead too when the time comes. It is far more important to self-govern than handing over the right to govern to those who cannot see beyond their nose.
Pakistan’s only hope is the country’s youth. Ironically, youth is allowed to work and vote for political parties but they are not allowed to form student societies and unions in colleges and universities. The college and university students exit the educational institutions and enter into a bigger university of practical life. Whatever they learn helps them in laying the foundation of their personal career and family life around that. Politics is very much a part of their lives too. In the past, when student unions were not banned in colleges and universities, the students played an important role in country’s politics too. How they do that in advanced countries is a very important subject for research.
ZHK
2013
Zahid Hussain Khalid
ICMR 2013 International Conference on Emerging Markets, Superior University, Lahore, Pakistan
ZHK 2013
Pakistan Leaderless Leader in Economic Growth Potential Among Emerging Markets Page 2
POSITIONING PAKISTAN NATIONAL IMAGE
Introduction: Questioning Pakistan’s Economic Growth Potential………………………………………………….……..………03
Pakistan’s Real Economic Growth Potential…………………………………………………………………………………………………..….04
Global Perspective: Future Work Skills and Six Drivers of Change……………………………………………………………………………………………………….……..05
Seven Key Corporate Challenges and Actions……..……………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………..06
Global State of Talent………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………….07
The Value Chain of Talent……………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………07
A Major Concern: Employability………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………….08
Contextual Aspects of Governance, Capacity Levels and Evaluation………………………………………………………………….09
Positioning Pakistan on the World Economic Map of the Rapid Growth Economies………………………………………….10
How is Pakistan looked at?.........................................................................................................................................................................10
The Causes and Consequences of the Negative National Image………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………..11
Nine unattended flaws in the System of Governance….……………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………..11
Three Immediate Challenges…………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………….11
The First Step: Put the House in Order………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………..12
From Where to Begin: …Repositioning Pakistan………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………….12
Five Territories on the National Activity Map…………………………………………………………………………………………………….12
Why Five Territories on National Activity Map?.................................................................................................13
Social Activity………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………13
Political Activity…………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………..14
Economic Activity………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………..15
Diplomatic Activity………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………16
Military Activity…………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………..18
National Activity Plan from Civil Society’s Perspective………………………………………………………………………………………18
Social Activity: Action………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………….18
Political Activity: Action………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………20
Economic Activity: Action……………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………21
Diplomatic Activity: Action………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………….22
CONCLUSION…………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………….24
AUTHOR’S PROFILE……………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………24
READING LIST……………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………25
Pakistan Leaderless Leader in Economic Growth Potential Among Emerging Markets Page 3
Pakistan, a leaderless leader in economic growth potential among Emerging Markets…
By Zahid Hussain Khalid
INTRODUCTION: Questioning Pakistan’s Growth Potential
We fail to see Pakistan among the top 25 rapid growth markets, Pakistan is neither a contributor nor a
beneficiary of ten years of massive growth reflected in an investment of US$2.9 trillion by Asian
companies in regional and global expansion during 2003 to 2011 and Pakistan is also not among 25
countries which have been placed by Earnst and Young’s Rapid-growth Markets at the highest, medium
and the lowest risk levels respectively. Is this situation in Pakistan permanent? Will it never change? Is
there any room for optimism? CFO Innovation Asia Business Outlook Survey of first quarter 2013 notices
sharp increase in optimism on the growth prospects in Asia based on a cautious listing of strengths,
willingness and concerns of Asian corporate leaders. Do Pakistani people and political and corporate
leaders also have any reason to be optimist of their country’s and corporate sector’s growth prospects?
Pakistan has more than one reason to be optimist: Country’s ideal geographical location; a
predominantly young population and demographic dividend for timely absorbing the economic shock
waves across different social and economic
segments of the society during the most critical
period of Pakistan’s social, political, economic,
diplomatic and military history spanned over a
period of more than a decade; people of
Pakistan’s response to diplomatic and military
provocation as well as ongoing clearly visible
foreign military action other than war within its
boundaries compounded by a state of lawlessness and complete failure of law enforcement agencies
with patience; and Pakistan’s more than humble nuclear capability posture are more than convincing to
believe that room for optimism will always remain there for Pakistani leaders and the people to get up,
Pakistan Leaderless Leader in Economic Growth Potential Among Emerging Markets Page 4
go and get counted not only in Asian but global growth markets and five territories on the national and
global activity maps, a term coined and introduced by author of this paper.
PAKISTAN’S REAL ECONOMIC GROWTH POTENTIAL:
Pakistan is one of the few ideally located human and natural resource rich countries of the world. Very
few countries have such a rich profile of the tangible and intangible elements of national power: ideal
geographical location; highest percentage of youth in the population mix; immense potential in social,
economic, political, diplomatic and military leadership; the most challenging and promising diplomatic
horizon displaying a rainbow of the possibility of extension and the fear of contraction of borders in at
least three sides of the country’s boundary lines; and one of the mightiest military force in the world.
POSITIONING PAKISTAN
Pakistan’s Regional GDP, keeping the four out of five overwhelmingly positive aspects of country’s
tangible and intangible elements of national power in mind, makes it one of the most attractive places
for regional strategic investment in South Asia. Regional GDP, according to Euromoney magazine,
assesses a country’s catchment area in terms of the GDP of all economies within 500 kilometers of its
borders.
While Pakistan remains hanged between dismal performance and more than a dozen reasons for
optimism, “Between 2012 and 2017, the share of world CP market growth coming from emerging Asia,”
according to Earnst and Young’s analysis from Euromonitor data, June 2013, ‘Brand New Order – Profit
or lose Balancing the growth-profit paradox for global consumer products companies and retailers in
Asia’s emerging markets,’ “will rise from 29% to 38%.”Pakistan evidently has the potential to contribute
more than any other country in the region by drawing and re-drawing natural and human resources
maps and seriously working on them to make them appear on the world economic map.
Socially, 70 percent population under 30 years
Economically, one of few countries with world’s highest Regional GDP
Politically, genuine national security-risk free patriotic leadership?
Geographically, the posibility of territorial expansion and contraction in all directions cannot be ruled out
Militarily, one of the world’s less than a dozen most powerful countries
Pakistan Leaderless Leader in Economic Growth Potential Among Emerging Markets Page 5
TIMELINE OF TAKEOVER BY CHINA AND INDIA AS GLOBAL ECONOMIC LEADERS
It is rightly perceived that China is moving
ahead cautiously as a global economic growth
leader; India’s claim to third position in global
economic leadership is clouded with doubts at
present, though not out of reach yet, and
Pakistan is striving for an “externally borrowed”
breathing space. Will Pakistan be able to even
join the race for leadership among globally
acknowledged leaders?
Yes, Pakistan can by relying on its own natural and human resources governed and managed by
responsible and cautiously responsive political and corporate leaders.
GLOBAL SCENARIO: FUTURE WORK SKILLS AND SIX DRIVERS OF CHANGE
Future Work Skills 2020 Report has listed Six Drivers of Change: extreme longevity; rise of smart Six Drivers of Change
machines and systems; computational world;
new media ecology; super-structured organiza-
tions; and globally connected world. The
message in this report for 70% young Pakistanis
is to grow up; familiarize with smart machines
and systems; connect with computational
world; try to know the architects and
understand the reach and impact of new media
ecology, found or become part of super-
structured organizations and prepare to
become active citizens of globally connected
world. SOURCE: Future Work Skills 2020, Institute for the Future for the University of
Phoenix Research Institute 2011
Professional proficiency, according to Future Work Skill 2020 report, requires ten skills: sense- making;
social intelligence; novel and adaptative thinking; cross-cultural competency; computational thinking;
new media literacy; transdisciplinarity; design-mindset; cognitive load management; and virtual
collaboration.
Young Pakistanis have the ability to understand the dynamics and pace of innovation in today’s hyper-
connected world and find a place for their genuine intellectual, professional and entrepreneurial
1: Extreme Longevity
Increasing global life-spans change the nature of careers
and learning
2: Rise of smart machines and systems
Workplace automation nudges human workers out of
rote, epetitive tasks
3: Computational world
Massive increases in the sensors and processing power
make the world a programmable system
4: New Media Ecology
New communication tools require new media literacies
beyond text
5: Super-structured organizations
Social technologies drive new forms of production and
value creation
6: Globally connected world
Increased global interconnectivity puts diversity and
adaptability at the center of organizational structures
Pakistan Leaderless Leader in Economic Growth Potential Among Emerging Markets Page 6
capabilities in the global markets. Thousands of young Pakistanis are seen well placed in global
conglomerates and they are the real hope of tomorrow’s Pakistan.
FUTURE WORK SKILLS 2020
SOURCE: Future Work Skills 2020, Institute for the Future for the University of Phoenix
Research Institute 2011
Pakistani youth needs to focus on developing a
sense of inquisitive observation, meaningful
probe, clear understanding, consistent
experimenting, convincingly concluding,
patiently pre-testing, conclusively succeeding,
aesthetically packaging, extensively networking,
selectively communicating, and technically
collaborating.
SEVEN KEY CORPORATE CHALLENGES AND ACTIONS:
Accenture in their report, “Growth Journeys: Helping Asian companies realize the value of their
international expansion strategies,” have highlighted seven key corporate challenges: decision-making
processes and authority are over-concentrated in global headquarters; overseas offices' lack of respect
for the leadership authority of headquarters; lack of clear structure in top leadership roles and
processes; leadership across functions and geographies lacking alignment on the common goals of the
global organization; governance structures are not clearly understood by staff outside of the home
country; lack of ability to hold overseas offices accountable for not complying with processes and
procedures; weak cross-border collaboration and listed seven actions to continue moving on smoothly
KEY CORPORATE CHALLENGES AND ACTIONS
on growth track emphasizing the need for:
mentoring and coaching programs focused on
global leadership; personality and leadership
assessment for global leadership; cultural
sensitivity training; regular global video-
conferencing or other advanced communica-
tions; connecting talent across the global
company into teams or workshops; 360-degree
feedback for global leadership team members;
offering international assignments and global
rotation programs.
SOURCE: “Growth Journeys: Helping Asian companies realize the value of their international expansion strategies,” Accenture
Decision-making processes and authority are over-concentrated in global headquarters
Overseas offices' lack of respect for the leadership authority of headquarters
Lack of clear structure in top leadership roles and processes
Leadership across functions and geographies lacking alignment on the common goals of the global organization
Governance structures are not clearly understood by staff outside of the home country
Lack of ability to hold overseas offices accountable for not complying with processes and procedures
Weak cross-border collaboration
KEY
C
H
A
L
L
E
N
G
E
S
Mentoring and coaching programs focused on global leadership
Personality and leadership assessment for global leadership
Cultural sensitivity training
Regular global videoconferencing or other advanced communicat-ions
Connecting talent across the global company into teams or workshops
360-degree feedback for global leadership team members
Offering international assignments and global rotation programs
ACTIONS
Pakistan Leaderless Leader in Economic Growth Potential Among Emerging Markets Page 7
Pakistanis are capable of accepting the challenges and always found ready to come into action
whenever they were assigned the task to do so in the interest of their country. But, instead of country
benefitting from their actions, the rewards ended up in foreign bank accounts of corrupt political
leaders, criminal corporate mafias, bureaucrats and army generals.
PEOPLE WANT CHANGE! TO BEGIN WITH, FOCUS ON COUNTRY’S HIGHLY TALENTED YOUTH…
GLOBAL STATE OF TALENT:
For that the OECD’s “Education at a Glance” has
prepared a Global State of Talent with Right
Skills Projections Map 2030 highlighting
medium and strong employability challenges,
talent shortage and reduced demand and
greater talent availability and demand. This
map also indicates that Pakistan is among
countries with greater talent availability and
demand. The greater availability and demand of
The present global state of talent with the right skills, Projected to 2030
SOURCE: Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development, Education at a Glance (Paris: Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development, 2006), 155./ “Investment in Global Education: A strategic Imperative for Business,” Center for Global Education at Brookings, September 2013
talent in Pakistan underlines the need for the development of Pakistan’s Human Resource Maps and
their scientific alignment of demand and supply of world class talent well-equipped with national and
global competencies.
THE VALUE CHAIN OF TALENT:
THE VALUE CHAIN OF TALENT
SOURCE: “Investment in Global Education: A strategic Imperative for Business,” Center for Global Education at Brookings, September 2013
The Value Chain of Talent published in “Investment in Global Education: A strategic Imperative for
Business,” Center for Global Education at Brookings, needs slight amendment to incorporate , Shakes-
peare’s “Seven Stages of Life” in the value chain.
Pakistan Leaderless Leader in Economic Growth Potential Among Emerging Markets Page 8
In Pakistan’s case, the Value Chain of Talent demands planning for a citizen’s “Seven Stages of Life” from
early childhood to either entrepreneurship or employment and a post-retirement concern-free life.
A MAJOR CONCERN: EMPLOYABILITY
The Importance of Equitable Access and Good-Quality Education to the Private Sector (Non-exhaustive list)
SOURCE: “Investment in Global Education: A strategic Imperative for Business,” Center for Global Education at Brookings, September 2013
“Global employability studies rightly indicate
that from 2011 to 2030, the availability and
demand for talent will increase in emerging
market economies such as China, India,
Indonesia, South Africa and Brazil. However, in
these emerging market economies, despite a
rising pool of available workers, ‘employability’
will appear as a major concern. Employability
refers to an individual’s readiness for work with
foundational skills (i.e., literacy and numeracy) and transferable skills, such as problem solving,
communication and critical thinking” concluding that, “Unless education enrollment and completion are
strengthened in these economies, the eligible working age population may continue to experience a
denial of more productive and remunerative opportunities, which will have a negative impact on their
standard of living, the growth potential of businesses in these locations and the overall growth of these
economies.” The report has also emphasized the need for “The Importance of Equitable Access” and
“Good-Quality Education” to the Private Sector judiciously demanding the reduction in the “talent
acquisition and retention” and “learning and development” costs. Ironically, the talent acquisition and
retention costs are gradually decreasing un-proportionately to cost of learning and pre-recruitment
development self-financed by young people and their parents. Have a look:
MONTHLY HHOUSEHOLD BUDGET ALLOCATIONS ON EDUCATION “I CANNOTAFFORD EDUCATIONAL OPPORTUNITIES WHERE I LIVE.”
SOURCE: Nielsen Global Survey of Consumer Demand, Q1 2013 SOURCE: Nielsen Global Survey of Consumer Demand, Q1 2013
Pakistan Leaderless Leader in Economic Growth Potential Among Emerging Markets Page 9
So, what the governments need to do is to bring down the enrollment and tuition fee through a mix of
corporate sponsorships and government subsidiaries in the developing world to an affordable level and
improve the quality of education for all irrespective of the social and economic status of the students
and their parents. The present system of education across the globe is evidently producing classes of
different levels of employees who rarely move from lower managerial level to higher managerial levels
and this will be noticed not in the distant but the near future.
The most important aspect of this ironic situation is the need for understanding the seriousness of the
psychological and social dimensions of this issue before it’s too late.
ANALYZING POTENTIAL RETURNS TO THE PRIVATE SECTOR FROM INVESTMENT IN EDUCATION
Does this yardstick to measure “profitability of
investment in education: concepts and
methods,” have a module to evaluate the
return on investment to Pakistan or to that
matter any other country?
SOURCE: “Investment in Global Education: A strategic Imperative for Business,” Center for Global Education at Brookings, September 2013
CONTEXTUAL ASPECTS OF GOVERNANCE, CAPACITY LEVELS AND EVALUATION:
The Framework for Institutional Performance Evaluation consists of Four Cycles of Preparedness:
Four Cycle of Preparedness
5 Motivations
6 Environments
7 Capacity linkages
and
4 Performance parameters.
This frame work prepared by Universalia (1985)
and IDRC (1995) provides a simple to follow
guideline for political and corporate governance
and its evaluation.
SOURCE: Universalia 1985; IDRC 1991; Influencing Change: Building Evaluation Capacity to Strengthen Governance, The World Bank 2011.
Do our systems of political and corporate governance and education meet any of the criteria such as
motivation, environment, capacity and performance in any walk of life?
Pakistan Leaderless Leader in Economic Growth Potential Among Emerging Markets Page 10
PROCESS CUSTODIANSHIP AND GOVERNANCE IN DIFFERENT CONTEXTS:
SOURCE: Mohammad A. Jaljouli, “Evaluation Systems as Strategy Management Tools: Building Dubai’s Institutional Learning Capacity,/Influencing Change: Building Evaluation Capacity to Strengthen Governance, The World Bank 2011.
Mohammad A. Jaljouli, author of “Evaluation Systems as Strategy Management Tools: Building Dubai’s Institutional Learning Capacity,” published in “Influencing Change: Building Evaluation Capacity to Strengthen Governance,” has illustrated process custodian-ship and governance in different contexts revolving around:
National Agenda
Government Strategy Map and
Sector Strategy Maps covering Health, Education, Social Development and Economic Development
Does the government of Pakistan have an Integrated “Contextual National Agenda,” and a “Set of
Natural and Human Resource Maps?”
This paper will discuss the demand of Five Territories on National Activity Map emphasizing the need for the preparation of an Integrated District, Provincial and National Agenda and a set of “Natural and Human Maps.”
THREE LEVELS OF CAPACITY
Caroline Heider, in her paper, “A Conceptual
Framework for Developing Evaluation
Capacities: Building on Good Practice,” has also
illustrated and discussed Three Levels of
Capacity: enabling environment; institutional
framework and knowledgeable, skilled and
competent individual.
SOURCE: Caroline Heider, A Conceptual Framework for Developing Evaluation Capacities: Building on Good Practice, “Influencing Change: Building Evaluation Capacity to Strengthen Governance,” The World Bank 2011.
POSITION PAKISTAN ON THE WORLD ECONOMIC MAP OF RAPID-GROWTH ECONOMIES:
HOW IS PAKISTAN LOOKED AT?
POSITIONING PAKISTAN NATIONAL IMAGE
STEP 1: Positioning Pakistan on the world
economic map
STEP 2: How is Pakistan looked at?
Lack of national consensus
Crime mafias and terrorist groups Communication deadlock
…Pakistan’s National Image
Pakistan Leaderless Leader in Economic Growth Potential Among Emerging Markets Page 11
THE CAUSES AND THE CONSEQUENCES OF THE NEGATIVE NATIONAL IMAGE:
Pakistan’s national image is result of a Cycle of Nine Social and Economic evils:
Illiteracy and Ignorance result in
Unemployment results in
Poverty results in
Deprivation results in
Psychological and Physical Stress result in
Crime and Corruption result in
Injustice and Violation of Human Rights result in
Religious, Ethnic and Political Prejudices result in
Sectarianism and Terrorism.
NINE UNATTENDED FLAWS IN THE SYSTEM OF GOVERNANCE
This is the dilemma of the world’s most powerful human and natural resource rich leaderless country of
the leaderless Muslim world..!
Read the details here: http://www.slideshare.net/19540201/the-end-of-the-independent-muslim-world
THREE IMMEDIATE CHALLENGES:
Disconfigured System of Governance Lack of Consensus and The Way Out
Read the details here: http://www.slideshare.net/19540201/the-greatest-media-and-advertising-challenge-of-the-most-powerful-human-and-resource-rich-country-of-the-muslim-world
ILLITERACY
AND
IGNORANCE
UNEMPLOY-MENT
POVERTY
DEPRIVATION
PSYCHO-LOGICAL STRESS
CRIME
AND
CORRUPTION
INJUSTICE AND
VIOLATION OF HUMAN
RIGHTS
RELIGIOUS, ETHNIC AND
POLITICAL PREJUDICES
SECTARIANISM AND
TERRORISM
CARELESS RULERS SELF-SERVING
PUBLIC SERVANTS
IRRESPONSIBLE CORPORATE CONGLOME-
RATES
PARALYZED LAW ENFORCEMENT
AGENCIES
INCOMPETENT FISCAL AND MONETARY MANAGERS
INEFFECTIVE DEBT
MANAGEMENT
EXTERNAL RELIANCE FOR BUDGETARY
TARGETS
ECONOMIC STRANGULATION
AND IN-DOUBT SOVEREIGNTY
PERPETUAL STATE OF UNCERTAINTY
AND IRRESPONSIBLE MEDIA OWNERS
AND JOURNALISTS
With no plan in
hand and funds
available
to break this
Cycle of Nine
Social and
Economic Evils
Pakistan Leaderless Leader in Economic Growth Potential Among Emerging Markets Page 12
THE FIRST STEP: PUT THE HOUSE IN ORDER
What you see here is a disconfigured system of governance
Entire nation is entrapped in something that is not part of any plan! Read the details here: http://www.slideshare.net/19540201/a-review-of-the-five-territories-on-the-national-activity-map
FROM WHERE TO BEGIN? … REPOSITION PAKISTAN
An integrated district, provincial and federal
Governance Plan based on a set of natural and
human resource maps in line with country’s
tangible and intangible elements of national
power and Strategic National Economic Vision
and its alignment with the demands of
Globalization for safeguarding national interest
and benefitting from resulting gains of keeping
pace with Global Economic Growth.
FIVE TERRITORIES ON THE NATIONAL ACTIVITY MAP:
See where the pieces of the puzzle will ultimately fit in… WHY FIVE TERRITORIES ON THE NATIONAL ACTIVITY MAP?
CIVIL SOCIETY?
Geographic
Location
Demographic
Mix
Economic
Growth Leadership
Military
Strength
Pakistan Leaderless Leader in Economic Growth Potential Among Emerging Markets Page 13
National Activity Map consists of social,
political, economic, diplomatic and military
thematic territories. Each thematic territory
needs a leader and leadership failure in any one
or more than one of the thematic territories on
National Activity Map results in nothing but
social unrest. The social unrest demands a
review of its dimensions proportionately linked
with the nature and seriousness of failure in any
one or more than one of the remaining four
territories. When the causes of social unrest are
discussed in the corridors of power, the political leaders discuss the political; economic leaders highlight
the economic; diplomatic leaders present bilateral and/or multilateral diplomatic; and military leaders
emphasize the military perspectives highlighting their respective roles, needs and plans of actions minus
the perspective and needs of the people who have entrusted them with a leadership role for the
protection of their interests. What do we find missing here? Who is supposed to highlight the social
sector perspective? Yes, federal and provincial social sector related ministers and genuine civil society
leaders supposedly represent the people but isn’t their social sector development agenda prepared and
financed by international donors? Consequently, who will they represent and report to? The will
obviously represent and report to those who holds the purse!
Read the details here: http://www.slideshare.net/19540201/pakistans-independence-day-message-to-government-and-people-of-pakistan
SOCIAL ACTIVITY:
Social territory is a nucleus around which the other four territories on the national activity map revolve.
A family, therefore, is a focal point with reference to social and civil rights and responsibilities. It is,
therefore, necessary to understand its role in national politics and national planning needs to focus on
an individual’s seven stages of life.
CIVIL SOCIETY AND THE SEVEN STATGES OF LIFE
SOCIAL
Civil Society
Political
Economic
Diplomatic
Military
Pakistan Leaderless Leader in Economic Growth Potential Among Emerging Markets Page 14
Each transition of an individual’s life from one
stage to the other till his death reflects a change
in his role, his rights and his responsibilities as
member of his family, society and the state. The
family, the society and the government are
supposed to design rights and obligations
keeping in view a human beings needs and
ability to contribute to family, society and the
government.
How do the families, societies and governments maintain balance between needs and obligations of an
individual? The answer is focus on Delivery System. And media has a great responsibility to do that.
Read the details here: http://www.slideshare.net/19540201/the-greatest-media-and-advertising-challenge-of-the-most-powerful-human-and-resource-rich-country-of-the-muslim-world
POLITICAL ACTIVITY:
Politics has become subservient to an “adjustable” party agenda on “day-to-day basis” instead of
“manifesto focused” governance to represent the voters in democratic as well as non-democratic
political systems across the globe. Agenda adjustability is a necessity that dawn on political leaders and
dictators after they are voted in to wear the crown or the crown finds their heads in a country like
Pakistan. They come to know only then that demands of the corridors of power are totally different
from the demands of the street power.
The social, political, economic, diplomatic and
military confusion visible in the capitals of
different continents, including Pakistan, clearly
indicates that the political leaders across the
globe are unsuccessfully struggling to create a
workable balance between their party
manifestos, the expectations of their
disappointed voters and long term national
strategic vision/goals and genuine external pressures of globalization. Political situation in Pakistan is far
more disturbing in view of the fact that the country is in a mess on all fronts of governance.
HOW TO REMAIN
FOCUSED?
PARTY
MANIFESTO
EXPECTATIONS OF VOTERS
COALITION CONCERNS AND DAY-TO-DAY DEMANDS AND
PRESSURES
PRESSURES OF GLOBALIZATION
Pakistan Leaderless Leader in Economic Growth Potential Among Emerging Markets Page 15
ECONOMIC ACTIVITY:
New financial world order in a globalized economy has exposed the economies of the countries to
internal threats compounded by external visible and invisible pressures. Unhindered flow of money
across borders has created a new breed of non-state entrepreneurs who do not believe in nationalism
or patriotism, as the employees don’t believe in loyalty to their companies. They invest the money
where the return is the highest. They are, in a way, justified in doing that because in business any-
where in the world, the single most important
priority is to maximize return on investment.
The investors take their money to the countries
where the ease of doing business, availability of
cheap labor, no or minimum regulatory
interventions, no or the lowest tax regimes are
guaranteed to them. Consequently, we find
more than $30 trillion parked in offshore banks!
These non-state entrepreneurs have created an
economic havoc in developed economies of the
world by exporting jobs, creating unemploy-
ment back home and reducing GDP growth
rates in their own countries turning the task of
running a developed country’s economy into a
nightmare. The economic mess Europe and USA
find themselves in is self-explanatory evidence
of what is happening on global economic front. They are struggling to escape from the Domino Effect…
Fortunately, Pakistan is one of the top listed emerging market’s economies with higher Regional GDP
than the most preferred emerging economies in different continents of the world
(http://www.slideshare.net/19540201/potential-of-investment-in-pakistan-12752206). Why Pakistan has failed to take any
small or significant advantage of its globally acknowledged pro-investment inflow position on Global
Investment Flows Map of the World? The answer is carefully engineered disconfiguration of Pakistan’s
elements of national power with the connivance of the pawns of enemies of Pakistan placed at different
management levels in almost every pillar of the state as well as corporate sector. These allegedly known
and unknown pawns in every pillar of the state and corporate sector have perpetuated a state of
permanent uncertainty in such a way that nothing in any area of economy can be planned and
CAPITAL
FLIGHT
EASE OF DOING BUSINESS
AVAILABILITY OF CHEAP LABOR
NO OR MINIMUM REGULATORY
INTERVENTION
NO OR NOMINAL TAX REGIMES
Pakistan Leaderless Leader in Economic Growth Potential Among Emerging Markets Page 16
implemented with foreseeable, dependable or predictable timeline. On the policy making front the
government has become stooge of a number of criminal business cartels that are evidently inflicting
loses of billions of dollars in different sectors of economy bringing Pakistan to the edge of bankruptcy.
DIPLOMATIC ACTIVITY:
In today’s globally and economically
interconnected world, diplomacy is an art that
keeps a country on the safe side economically
and militarily in a highly unpredictable world.
Diplomatic activity, therefore, is the most
sensitive of all other activities on the National
Activity Map. If we look at what is happening on
the economic and military fronts in Pakistan, we
clearly see a glimpse of the professional capability of the people who are managing the foreign affairs of
the country. The situation in and around Pakistan was never unpredictable even decades ago for an
average student of international relations in early 1970s! That was almost four decades ago
(http://www.slideshare.net/19540201/hang-together-or-you-will-be-hanged-individually and http://www.slideshare.net/ 19540201/the-
end-of-the-independent-muslim-world. Diplomacy is not a day-to-day affair. It is considered as the backbone of a
country’s National Strategic Vision and Goals. Governments come and go but the National Strategic
Vision and Goals do not change with the changes in and around a country.
A country’s vigilant leaders always remain fully cognizant of developments in and around borders of
their countries. The only but controversial visionary statesman par excellence and expert in diplomacy
was Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto who knew what was happening, what was expected and how to prepare for any
eventuality. The irony of international relations is that he failed to envision his own unfortunate abrupt
political and physical end. After him Pakistan has become a “Diplomatic Orphan” taking summersaults
with developments in and around its borders.
Zia-ul-Haq played his diplomatic cards fairly well
to take full advantage of political, economic and
military developments in and around Pakistan.
Internally, he had succeeded in partially
damaging the vote bank of Pakistan Peoples’
Party in Sind, Punjab, Baluchistan and NWFP
and creating his own political squad.
Externally, he did not compromise on economic cost of his country’s military involvement in
Afghanistan. His diplomatic and strategic military skills were negatively overshadowed by his political
PAKISTAN
AFGHANISTAN
MIDDLE
EAST
IRAN
CHINA AND SOUTH ASIA
Pakistan Leaderless Leader in Economic Growth Potential Among Emerging Markets Page 17
blunders and known and unknown reasons behind mysterious Ojhri blasts. After the removal of Junejo
as Prime Minister he was told by those for whom he was working that his days were over!
The political regimes prior to Musharraf’s take
over, were internally struggling to keep their
feet on ground politically. They had little to do
on the external front except for a brief
interaction of Nawaz Sharif with British Prime
Minister and American President who wanted
him to review his declared intention to make
Pakistan a confirmed nuclear state. Pakistan did
not comply and this was the point from where Pakistan’s days of skillfully engineered political and
economic doom started. With the nuclear explosion Pakistan had become allegedly, but NOT in reality
“The Only Nuclear Fort of Islam.” Even that was
not to be tolerated at any cost in any capital of
the non-Muslim world for obviously known
reasons. This is when Pakistan’s economic
strangulation was seriously planned and put
into operation not covertly but overtly. Another
controversial diplomatic as well as military
event was Nawaz Sharif’s visit to United States
of America for seeking support to put an end to India-Pakistan Kargil clash. That is the history of
Pakistan’s “political and economic diplomacy.”
The dismissal of Nawaz Sharif’s government by
Pervez Musharraf had diplomatically isolated
Pakistan until the attack on Twin Towers in
September 2001 opening a new chapter in the
history of diplomacy in Pakistan and rest of the
world. After 9/11 Pakistan’s armed forces
played a decisive role in both diplomatic as well
as military affairs of Pakistan.
ZIA-UL-HAQUE MACHIAVELLI'S
"PRINCE"
MUJAHEDEEN IN KABUL AND ANP IN PESHAWAR
MQM IN SIND
FIRST PHASE OF MILITARY MULLAH ALLIANCE
NAWAZ SHARIF IN PUNJAB
NAWAZ SHARIF'S
DILLEMAS
NUCLEAR EXPLOSION
ECONOMIC STRANGULATION
IRRESPONSIBLE GOVERNANCE
KARGIL
MISHAP
Pakistan Leaderless Leader in Economic Growth Potential Among Emerging Markets Page 18
MILITARY ACTIVITY: 9/11 is a turning point in the history of diplomacy and military affairs. The unilateral and multilateral
application of the theory of preemptive strikes and the concept of military operation other than war in
war theaters in almost all continents of the world have exposed the political and military leaders to
extremely serious new challenges.
The political leaders have to justify the social,
economic and diplomatic consequences of
involvement in externally ill-advised or flawed
internally planned military actions within and
outside a country. Similarly, military leaders
have to seek parliamentary cover prior to
involvement in war against terror in and around
a country. Consequently, the political leaders
and military commanders are under tremend-
ous pressures to justify their actions and the
impact of those actions on five territories of
National Activity Map. This is not Pakistan
specific, political, diplomatic and military deve-
lopment. “You are either with us or against us” and the “League of Democracy” are two other areas of
global concern that have disturbed the political, diplomatic and military balance to an extent that their
adverse social and economic fallout is witnessed in every corner of the world.
These are indeed difficult times. Exceptionally extraordinary situations underline the need for innovative
re-invention of state management systems based on scientific analysis of ground realities. The question
is how to either renegotiate or get out of bilateral and multilateral obligations and alliances that are
evidently destabilizing Pakistan and disconfiguring and damaging its system of governance to an
irreparable extent.
NATIONAL ACTION PLAN FROM CIVIL SOCIETY’S PERSPECTIVE:
SOCIAL ACTIVITY: ACTION
PSY-OPS AND
MILITARY WEB
THEORY OF PREEMPTION
CONFUSING MILITARY
AND
POLITICAL TACTICS
MILITARY OPERATION
OTHER THAN
WAR
NEED FOR
LEGISLATIVE
COVER
Pakistan Leaderless Leader in Economic Growth Potential Among Emerging Markets Page 19
In order to make its voice heard, the civil society needs to create public pressure groups and personal
security platforms.
EXAMPLES: An irresponsible and irresponsive ministry of water and power has made the life of people
miserable in every walk of life by launching a country-wide unscheduled and unannounced load-
shedding plan instead of controlling politically motivated leakage and attempting other available
management options strictly and honestly. The people came out in the streets to protest against this
brutal practical demonstration of ministerial and bureaucratic incompetence. What was witnessed?
An angry mob was seen and reported attacking everything that came in its way turning a genuine
expression of displeasure and the right to protest into a violent criminal act and an activity without an
outcome. What did this activity without an outcome convey? The conversion of civil society into an
unruly mob without a well defined goal and invisibility of a civil society leader to guide them for
agitating for a purpose in a way to get the problem solved. So, in a situation like this people need to first
nominate someone from among themselves to lead them when their elected representatives go
into hiding and then agree on a plan of action to make sure that their problem is not temporarily but
permanently solved. Media on its part failed to honestly investigate the genuine reasons for shortfall in
electricity generation and exposing the real culprits behind the crime with facts, figures and evidence.
How civil society can point out media’s failure or to come up with its own investigative research by
young college and university students declaring media as a “silent partner in crime” and demanding
action against the ministry officials, the power generation and distribution companies and their corrupt
staff, the politicians with evidence of supporting criminals involved in “power theft” and the media
staff’s failure in doing justice to the assigned beat.
The people need to get organized, create social response platforms and pick up their politically
uninfluenced and unbiased civil society leaders.
Pakistan’s only hope is the country’s youth. Ironically, youth is allowed to work and vote for political
parties but they are not allowed to form student societies and unions in colleges and universities. The
college and university students exit the educational institutions and enter into a bigger university of
practical life. Whatever they learn helps them in laying the foundation of their personal career and
family life around that. Politics is very much a part of their lives too. In the past, when student unions
were not banned in colleges and universities, the students played an important role in country’s politics
too. How they do that in advanced countries is a very important subject for research.
Pakistan Leaderless Leader in Economic Growth Potential Among Emerging Markets Page 20
POLITICAL ACTIVITY: ACTION
Civil society has to discard any individual who seeks public office for personal benefit and pick the
public office holders themselves brushing aside all those internal and external intelligence agencies
sponsored politicians who appear in two to three television programs in a single day and are
introduced by print and electronic media as genuine political leaders particularly sons of army
generals, daughters of politicians and technocrats of dubious political and personal character and
retired bureaucrats, judges and army generals. They were repeatedly voted into power by people
and they did nothing except betraying trust of the voters. What they are good in is nothing but
talking and talking a lot without making any sense. This is what they and their party leaders are doing
for the last so many decades. All of them must be permanently discarded and thrown out of
country’s politics for good.
Civil society needs to come up with its own selection process and create platforms for the
nomination of candidates for national and provincial assemblies and the senate. The right of
selecting a candidate must be taken back from the political party leaders who have developed an
army of visionless incompetent and corrupt political idiots promoted by equally unprofessional and
now publically condemned criminally obliged print and electronic media journalists, anchors and
analysts.
All those politicians who have criminal charges against them or are being tried in the courts of law
ought to be disqualified from contesting election for any public office until they are proven not guilty.
Civil Society has to develop a mechanism for the investigation of public complaints against the office
holders of the four pillars of the state and take the culprits to courts and judicial council no matter
how highly placed and important they are and see that the justice is done.
Presently ongoing superior court proceedings in NRO and other cases have established beyond any
doubt that the constitution of Pakistan is seriously flawed and evidently provides shameful cover to
criminals once they are elected. These flaws need to be pointed out by the civil society for immediate
review and appropriate correction.
Pakistan Leaderless Leader in Economic Growth Potential Among Emerging Markets Page 21
ECONOMIC ACTIVITY: ACTION
The government of Pakistan does not have a National Economic Vision, Natural and Human Resource
Potential and Performance Map and rationalized Public Administration Expenditure Manuel. The
bureaucracy does not have a “Public Service Code of Conduct” that binds it to remain open and
available to ideas and projects of national importance. Presidential immunity is used by section
officers and federal secretaries for hiding incompetence, negligence, indifference and corruption at
every level of state management operation. Civil society has to create platforms for addressing the
highlighted state management loopholes.
The civil society, first of all, needs to make the government accountable for the direct and indirect
taxes that are paid by people but are not accounted for in FBR’s records through unlawful connivance
of FBR’s staff with corporate criminals.
Annual increase in the salaries of government employees has to be linked with their transparent
public dealing and professional performance. None of the government ministries as well as staff of
the Prime Minister and President secretariats have done anything for the country and the people to
be proud of. Therefore, there is no justification for across the board increase in their salaries. Their
failure to perform their duties has been shamefully rewarded. Nothing can be more insulting and
obnoxious than this act of ignorance on record by the finance ministers and Prime Ministers’ entire
cabinets that goes un-noticed and un-condemned to the level it deserves.
All the facilities regarding accommodation, payment of utility bills, personal security and domestic
staff have to be withdrawn with immediate effect irrespective of the official positions of the
beneficiaries in three pillars of the state. When tax payers are not receiving any service against the
taxes they are paying, the government officials must be ashamed of using those services being
Pakistan Leaderless Leader in Economic Growth Potential Among Emerging Markets Page 22
servants of the people. These unlawful perks and privileges have made them criminally negligent of
their duties and irresponsive to the genuine problems of the people.
DIPLOMATIC ACTIVITY: ACTION
Pakistan’s ideal geographical location makes it one of the most fortunate countries in the world but the
situation in and around Pakistan has made it the most unfortunate and rightly or wrongly the most
ridiculed piece of land on the map of the world. Who is responsible for turning Pakistan’s good
diplomatic fortune into shameful ridicule?
Without an attempt to give a controversial
answer to this question it will be hopefully
more appropriate to look into the possibility of
reversing the situation to Pakistan’s advantage.
The key for that is the proper evaluation of
Pakistan’s tangible and intangible elements of
national power and their reconfiguration for
proper positioning and utilization of country’s
ideal geographical location, its rich natural and
human resources, and its incomparably unique
economic and overseas investment potential.
MILITARY ACTIVITY: ACTION
It will not be inappropriate and out of place to blame Pakistan’s military commanders for the overall
mess Pakistan is in. So far Pakistan’s military commanders have repeatedly jumped in to put the
country’s democracy back on track but always gifted Pakistanis a much bigger mess before they left.
They made failed attempt after attempts to covertly and overtly reform Pakistan’s overall system of
governance making it far more ungovernable through their hand-picked politicians and “Kalam Kabila”
(The media owners and their artificially over-pampered writers and anchors who are now getting
POLITICAL & CIVIL SOCIETY
LEADERSHIP?
GEOGRAPHICAL LOCATION
NATURAL & HUMAN
RESOURCES
ECONOMIC & INVESTMENT POTENTIAL
DEFENCE CAPABILITY
Pakistan Leaderless Leader in Economic Growth Potential Among Emerging Markets Page 23
exposed and appearing in their true colors). Now instead of trying another way out in an old manner it
will be advisable to use the civil society giving them military cover in getting their right to self-govern
back to them in its true sense. How that can be done? That can be done only by mobilizing “Influence
Groups” in every walk of life through “Specific Self-Governance Tasks” within a given timeline. The
commanders need to command and see what the followers do when they are on their way to become
masters of their own destiny instead of getting enslaved by political demagogues with dual and multiple
nationalities and loyalty to none. Why is it necessary? It is necessary because Pakistan’s security is NOT
threatened by external conspiracies or possible aggression. Pakistan’s very survival is threatened by
internal lawlessness, incompetence of political leaders with criminal background and evidently
vulnerable to external anti-state pressures and complete irreparable collapse of the system of
governance if the affairs of the state are continued to be managed in the way they are managed now.
Pakistan Leaderless Leader in Economic Growth Potential Among Emerging Markets Page 24
CONCLUSION:
When those who are given the mandate to govern make the country ungovernable then the only way
out for the civil society is to lead the way to show the leaders that those who are mislead can lead too
when the time comes. It is far more important to self-govern than handing over the right to govern to
those who cannot see beyond their nose.
Pakistan’s only hope is the country’s youth. Ironically, youth is allowed to work and vote for political parties but they are not allowed to form student societies and unions in colleges and universities. The college and university students exit the educational institutions and enter into a bigger university of practical life. Whatever they learn helps them in laying the foundation of their personal career and family life around that. Politics is very much a part of their lives too. In the past, when student unions were not banned in colleges and universities, the students played an important role in country’s politics too. How they do that in advanced countries is a very important subject for research.
Zahid Hussain Khalid has worked for national and international media groups not as a journalist but a marketing practitioner, researcher and analyst. He successfully initiated and completed the assigned managerial and country tasks for such publications as Arab News, Financial Times, Jang Group, Euromoney magazine, Petroleum Economist, South China Morning Post, Asiamoney magazine, Innovation Management and Hong Kong Standard except Forbes Inc, Forbes Global, Forbes Europe, Forbes Asia. He will always remain thankful to Mr. William Adamapolous and Mr. Steve Forbes of Forbes Inc and Mr. Tony Shale CEO, Euromoney Institutional Investor Group (Jersey) Limited for their personal encouragement and support in initiating and marketing Pakistan-specific innovative integrated media packages for investment promotion. He also worked as Associate Producer, Current Affairs, Pakistan Television Corp.
His articles have appeared in the Daily Jang, Daily Mashriq, the Nawa-e-Waqt and daily The Muslim on social, economic, political, diplomatic and military subjects which are available here http://zahidhkhalid.wordpress.com/ and here http://www.slideshare.net/19540201
He had co-produced more than hundred episodes of the most popular weekly program “Hafta-e-Rafta” and was nominated for Best Producer’s award for documentaries on Afghan Refugees and Year of the Aged.
His work reflects a visible difference because he strongly believes in innovative approach in everything that he does. He was co-owner of International Media Sales from 1991 to 2012 and is owner of SUN&FZ Associates since 1994.
Pakistan Leaderless Leader in Economic Growth Potential Among Emerging Markets Page 25
READING LIST:
1. Growing Beyond: Rapid growth market, Winter Edition - January 2013,” Earnst & Young
2. “Growth Journeys: Helping Asian companies realize the value of their international expansion strategies,” Accenture 2013
3. Earnst & Young Rapid-Growth Markets Forecast – October 2013
4. CFO innovation Asia, Business Outlook Survey, First Quarter 2013
5. “Brand New Order – “Profit or lose Balancing the growth-profit paradox for global consumer products companies and retailers in Asia’s
emerging markets,” Earnst & Young, June 2013
6. Future Work Skills 2020, Institute for the Future for the University of Phoenix Research Institute 2011
7. Education at a Glance (Paris: Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development, 2006), 155.
8. “Investment in Global Education: A strategic Imperative for Business,” Center for Global Education at Brookings, September 2013
9. Nielsen Global Survey of Consumer Demand, Q1 2013
10. Universalia 1985; IDRC 1991; Influencing Change: Building Evaluation Capacity to Strengthen Governance, The World Bank 2011
11. Mohammad A. Jaljouli, “Evaluation Systems as Strategy Management Tools: Building Dubai’s Institutional Learning Capacity,” /
“Influencing Change: Building Evaluation Capacity to Strengthen Governance,” The World Bank 2011
12. Caroline Heider, A Conceptual Framework for Developing Evaluation Capacities: Building on Good Practice, “Influencing Change: Building
Evaluation Capacity to Strengthen Governance,” The World Bank 2011.
13. Zahid Hussain Khalid, Potential of Investment in Pakistan: http://www.slideshare.net/19540201/potential-of-investment-in-pakistan-
12752206
14. Zahid Hussain Khalid, Pakistan’s Independence Day Message to Government and the people of Pakistan:
15. http://www.slideshare.net/19540201/pakistans-independence-day-message-to-government-and-people-of-pakistan
16. Zahid Hussain Khalid, America, the Great Game and the Greater Middle East – an un-discussed perspective unveiling the birth of
conspiracies, http://www.slideshare.net/19540201/america-the-great-game-and-the-greater-middle-east-an-undiscussed-perspective-
unveiling-the-birth-of-conspiracy-theories
17. Zahid Hussain Khalid, Malala Mishap and Global Media Scenario in Retrospect, http://www.slideshare.net/19540201/malala-mishap-and-
global-media-scenario-in-retrospect-taliban-and-pakistan
18. Zahid Hussain Khalid, The Weaknesses and the only Strength of the Muslims, http://www.slideshare.net/19540201/the-weaknesses-of-
the-muslims