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Business Recorder
23-05-2025
- Business
- Business Recorder
Gold price per tola increases Rs3,500 in Pakistan
Gold prices in Pakistan gained on Friday in line with their increase in the international market. In the local market, gold price per tola reached Rs351,000 after it gained Rs3,500 during the day. Similarly, 10-gram gold was sold at Rs300,925 after gaining Rs3,000, according to the rates shared by the All-Pakistan Gems and Jewellers Sarafa Association (APGJSA). On Thursday, gold price per tola reached Rs347,500 after it lost Rs1,900 during the day. The international rate of gold also jumped on Friday. The rate was at $3,326 per ounce (with a premium of $20), an increase of $35, as per APGJSA. Meanwhile, silver price per tola increased by Rs38 to reach Rs3,466.


Business Recorder
23-05-2025
- Business
- Business Recorder
Gold prices plunge
KARACHI: Gold prices on Thursday took a big plunge, reflecting the global bullion market's bearish trend, sinking under $3,300 per ounce, traders said. World's fluctuating bullion market lost $19 to rest at $3,291 per ounce, scaling down the local gold prices by Rs1,900 per tola and Rs1,629 per 10 grams. The sizeable drop pushed back the gold prices to Rs347,500 per tola and Rs297,925 per 10 grams, according to All Pakistan Sarafa Gems and Jewellers Association. Domestic silver prices fell by Rs38 and Rs33, dropping to Rs3,428 per tola and Rs2,938 per 10 grams, respectively. The global silver prices stood at $33 per ounce, the association added. Copyright Business Recorder, 2025


Express Tribune
22-05-2025
- Business
- Express Tribune
Gold prices drop in Pakistan as global rates fall
Listen to article Gold prices in Pakistan fell on Thursday, mirroring a decline in international markets. The local price per tola dropped by Rs1,900 to Rs347,500. Similarly, 10-gram gold declined by Rs1,629, selling at Rs297,925, according to the All-Pakistan Gems and Jewellers Sarafa Association (APGJSA). Internationally, gold fell by $19 to $3,291 per ounce (with a $20 premium), the APGJSA reported. On Wednesday, gold prices had risen by Rs6,600 to reach Rs349,400 per tola. Meanwhile, silver prices also slipped, with the per tola rate down by Rs38 to Rs3,428.


Express Tribune
19-05-2025
- Business
- Express Tribune
Lagging development
Taxpayers contribute a portion of their hard-earned income each year with the expectation that their money will be used to improve public welfare. Yet in Sindh, the word 'development' has become little more than a catchphrase - repeated in budget speeches and project announcements, but rarely reflected in real outcomes. With less than two months left in the financial year, the provincial government has suddenly sprung into action, issuing a barrage of tenders for new projects that cannot be executed within the ongoing fiscal year. In the first week of May alone, the Highways Division floated tenders for over 200 projects, including the construction of 125 roads in Umarkot and the installation of 77 CC drains in Larkana. It is common knowledge that even after a tender is issued, awarding contracts and mobilising resources take time. Realistically, work on these projects will only begin after the current fiscal year ends, on June 30. Expenditure statistics also reveal a pattern. While 88% of the Rs1,925 billion allocated for non-development expenditures had already been spent by early May, only 69% of the Rs959 billion earmarked for development was utilised. This means non-development spending takes priority, while actual progress on ground-level infrastructure and services remains sluggish - a deliberate strategy to create the illusion of action while sidestepping accountability. Instead of including ready-to-execute projects in the annual budget - those with approved PC-1s and cleared formalities - departments continue to propose schemes that are nowhere near implementation. As a result, the first three quarters of the year are spent navigating bureaucratic red tape, and the last quarter is wasted in rushed, last-minute tendering. If the Sindh government is serious about development, it must commit to better planning. Budgets should only include projects that are implementation-ready. Otherwise, this yearly charade of late tenders will continue to betray public trust and deepen the crisis of governance.


Express Tribune
19-05-2025
- Business
- Express Tribune
Govt lags in using development funds
Taxpayers allocating a proportion of their income for their country expect to see the results of their contribution in the form of some development work implemented by the government to improve the quality of life of people in the country. In Sindh, however, development is reduced to a buzzword, with the majority of funds underutilized even as the year ends. With only weeks remaining before the books close, several provincial departments are still issuing tenders for new development schemes, according to sources. In the first week of May alone, the Highways Division of the Sindh government invited tenders for more than 200 projects, including the construction of 125 roads in Umarkot, setting up of a paver block in Larkana alongside the installation of 77 CC drains. It should be noted that the current financial year will end on June 30th and work on the projects will start only in the next financial year. This is because even after these tenders are floated, contracts take time to be awarded and work to begin-making the timely completion of projects within the year a pipe dream. While development funds are often released in scattered tranches, non-development allocations tend to be readily spent. According to figures obtained from the Finance Department, by the first week of May, Rs1,477 billion out of Rs1,925 billion allocated for non-developmental expenditures, had been released to provincial departments, which ended up spending 88 per cent of this amount. On the contrary, out of the Rs959 billion budget allocated to provincial departments for development projects, Rs571 billion was released, of which only 69 per cent was utilized. An official from the Finance Department, speaking on the condition of anonymity, confirmed that provincial departments spent a large chunk of the development budget on ongoing schemes, while very little was spent on new schemes. "Since there is no need to complete new formalities for ongoing schemes, it is easy for departments to spend money on existing projects. However, it is difficult to spend on new development schemes since it takes a long time for them to complete all the formalities," explained the official. Dr Kaiser Bengali, a renowned economist, highlighted various technical reasons behind the underutilization of development funds. "Funds are allocated in the budget for new development projects, but the financial year is spent completing their formalities. Any new development project has to go through various stages from approval and preparation of PC-1 to the release of funds. This process often takes a long time hence its implementation is delayed. The relevant institutions of the provincial government should include in the budget only those development schemes for which PC-1 has already been prepared. This will reduce the amount of time taken to implement them," opined Dr Bengali. The problem of timely utilization of funds is not limited to the funds allocated by the provincial government since the allocation received by the Sindh government from the federal government too is not utilized in a timely manner. This can be gauged from a report published by the Auditor General of Pakistan regarding the non-utilization of Zakat funds. Every year, the federal government distributes the funds collected in the form of Zakat to all the provinces, which are obliged to spend this money on the deserving people. With this money, financial assistance must be provided to the impoverished households in the provinces by giving them subsistence allowances. This amount should also be spent on the welfare of orphans, treatment of poor patients and scholarships for underprivileged students at universities. According to the report, the federal government provided Rs4.63 billion as Zakat to Sindh during the financial year 2021-22. However, despite the passage of a whole year, the provincial government spent only Rs850 million on public welfare.