Rashid Amjad. Private Industrial Investment in Pakistan 1960-70.
Cheema, Aftab Ahmad
Rashid Amjad. Private Industrial Investment in Pakistan 1960-70.
Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. 1982. Price: $ 25.00. 257 pp.
Illustrations; appendices; bibliography; index.
The role of industrialization in economic development can hardly be
overemphasized. The process of industrialization takes place through
capital formation, and it is important that the factors which determine
the rate of capital formation be identified and properly analysed. This
book gives an in-depth analysis of private industrial investment in
Pakistan during the Sixties, which increased sharply during the Second
Plan period but declined during the Third Plan period. It examines the
influence of foreign-resources inflow as well as of other factors on
private industrial investment during the Sixties. It contains an
enlightening discussion about the concentration of industrial power in a
few hands, their control over financial institutions, and their role in
the industrial growth of Pakistan.
The book is divided into three parts. Part I, consisting of
Chapters 1 and 2, deals with the institutional setting. It contains both
the theoretical framework and an elaborate discussion about the
corporate environment in Pakistan. The first chapter provides the
background material and highlights the main issues which are discussed
later in the book. This chapter includes discussion concerning the
overall behaviour of the economy from 1950 to 1970, and the changes in
variables like investment, foreign aid, government expenditure and
domestic savings in the Sixties. Private industrial investment reached a
peak level in 1964-65, but started declining in the subsequent years. In
1969-70 although there was some recovery but the investment was still
below the 1964-65 level. Foreign investment was also very low during the
Sixties despite favourable government policies.
Chapter 2 deals exclusively with the "institutional
setting" that influences private industrial investment. The author
refers to it as the 'corporate environment' which depends on
three institutions: the government, the monopoly houses, and the
financial institutions. All these institutions play an extremely
important role in influencing the private industrial investment. The
most interesting part of this chapter is the discussion about monopoly
houses. A monopoly house is characterised by "family ownership, has
a centralised decision-making authority and consists of several legally
separate companies engaged in highly diversified activities ranging from
industry to trade, finance and insurance" (p. 41). The
author's research on this subject showed that in 1970, 44 monopoly
houses controlled 77 percent of the gross fixed assets of all
manufacturing companies listed on the Karachi Stock Exchange.
Another important feature of the corporate sector brought to light
by the author is the existence of links between the monopoly houses,
with members of one monopoly house sitting on the Board of Directors of
a company controlled by another monopoly house. For 1970, the author was
able to establish the existence of 78 such inteflockings between quoted
companies belonging to different houses. This chapter provides a very
clear picture of the concentration of industrial power in a few hands
and their control over the financial institutions.
Part II of the book deals with the profitability analysis in the
manufacturing sector. After a brief description of the indicators of
profitability, Chapter 3 analyses in detail the profitability in cotton
textile, jute, sugar and other industries during the Second and Third
Five-Year Plan periods. It was found that profitability was different
not only among different industries but also in the same industry during
different years. These variations were partially attributed to changes
in government measures affecting industries and to vagaries of primary
output and prices.
An empirical analysis of differences in inter-industry
profitability is given in Chapter 4. The analysis is based on data for
25 industries for the 1965-70 period. This sample covered more than 80
percent of the large-scale manufacturing sector in West Pakistan. With
price cost margins as indicators of profitability, the results showed
that concentration, foreign competition, and capacity utilization were
some of the factors that were found to be statistically significant in
explaining the differences in profitability among different industries.
The results also showed that exports and advertising expenditure had a
negligible effect on profitability.
Part III deals exclusively with the analysis of the factors that
influence investment behaviour. This analysis has been conducted
separately for firms, monopoly houses, and industries. A number of
hypotheses about the effects of profits and sales on investment by firms
are tested in Chapter 5. Regression results based on cross-sectional as
well as pooled data for the Second and Third Five-Year Plan periods
showed that in most cases sales and profits did not have significant
effects on investment, but when regressions were run for the entire Plan
periods, using average profits and changes in sales as explanatory variables, both of these variables became statistically significant.
Foreign exchange loans were also found to influence the investment
behaviour of the firms.
The investment behaviour of monopoly houses, discussed in Chapter
6, was found to be different from that of the firms. Monopoly houses
engaged in a number of activities including manufacturing, trade,
banking, insurance, etc. They can, therefore, diversify their
investments within the existing structure and can also invest in new
projects to maximize the total profits from all firms under their
control. Empirical results show that during the Second Plan period
diversification and foreign exchange loans were the most significant
variables in explaining the investment behaviour of monopoly houses. The
effect of profits on investment was, however, negligible. For monopoly
houses which did not diversify into new industries, profits had some
effect on investment but not as strong as the foreign exchange loans
had.
Analysis of investment at the industry level (Chapter 7) shows that
profits and sales in the previous years were not significantly related
to investment in individual years, but their effect was significant over
the entire Plan periods except when there were no direct government
controls and when investment in new industries was excluded. Government
direct controls had a significant effect on industrial investment during
the Third Plan. The last chapter, which is written in an historical
context, explains the different stages of industrial growth in Pakistan
from 1947 to 1970. While the industrial growth in the Fifties is mainly
attributed to import substitution, in the first half of the Sixties it
depended to a large extent on foreign aid. The lower growth rate of
private industrial investment during the 1965-70 period, according to the author, was caused by the decline in foreign aid, increased military
imports after the 1965 war, increased imports of food grains because of
bad harvests, and the mounting burden of debt repayment.
The book contains a very comprehensive analysis of the private
industrial investment in Pakistan during the Second and Third Five-Year
Hans. One can not fail to be impressed by the collection of valuable
material by the author, its analytical examination and arrangement
reflecting profound research work. The conclusions reached demonstrate
the author's pragmatic approach, clarity of thought, and logical
reasoning.
While going through the empirical part of the book one can not
avoid the impression that variations in profitability and investment
have been explained through a rather limited number of variables. While
the variables included in different models are important, they explain
only a fraction of the total variation--in most cases less then 50
percent and in some cases even less than 10 percent. The explanatory
power of the models is thus somewhat limited. The discussion about the
concentration of industrial power in the form of monopoly houses and
their control over the financial institutions is very interesting and
revealing. On the whole the book is a good and quite useful attempt,
making a valuable addition to the existing literature on the subject.
Aftab Ahmad Cheema
Research Economist, Pakistan Institute of Development Economics,
Islamabad.