Pakistan floods deal fresh blow to struggling small businesses

Hit by floods and soaring prices, self-employed Pakistanis want government aid and action to fight climate change impacts.

Pakistan_Disaster_Relief
A mother gives her child a bowl of clean water in Charsarda District, in Pakistan's northwestern Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa Province, an area severely affected by monsoon floods. Image: United Nations Photo, CC BY-SA 3.0, via Flickr.

Dipping a roller into a tray of blue paint, Mohammad Rashid counts his losses after record monsoon rains forced him to hang up his overalls for weeks on end, adding to his money worries as a financial crisis grips Pakistan.

Millions of low-income small business owners and self-employed workers like Rashid are struggling to repair damage and recover lost earnings due to the torrential rains and flooding that have killed more than 1,000 people since June.

In Rashid’s home city of Karachi, the country’s largest, weeks of rain left the streets knee-deep in water and sludge and meant he could only work five days in July - Pakistan’s wettest for three decades.

“I earned not more than 10,000 rupees ($46),” Rashid, 43, said, comparing that to his usual monthly earnings of up to 100,000 rupees.

Facing a balance of payments crunch, Pakistan is finding it difficult to fund reconstruction efforts after the floods due to spending curbs as it awaits bailout money from the International Monetary Fund (IMF).

Gone are the days when climate change was the subject of drawing room discussions. It is affecting our everyday life. Food and water security is directly linked to climate hazards.

Shehbaz Sharif, prime minister, Pakistan

The government has announced cash support to families, but almost nothing has been offered to small businesses for damaged property and goods, and many traders say they feel abandoned.

“(The government) is killing us slowly,” said Mohammad Hamid, 27, at his shop where he sells and repairs printers.

He said he suffered losses due to getting stuck daily for hours on Karachi’s flooded roads. But his biggest problem is soaring prices that are hiking the cost of doing business - and undoing his gradual recovery from the impact of Covid-19.

Annual consumer price inflation reached nearly 25 per cent in July, the highest in 14 years.

“The powder used in the ink cartridges of printers has become expensive, but customers refuse to pay me if I increase my charges proportionately,” said Hamid, who has been dipping into his savings to provide for his family of seven. 

Monsoon reduction

While the monsoon brings a wave of destruction almost every year, successive governments have failed to adequately warn and prepare for its impact, say climate experts, warning that climate change is fuelling extreme weather.

“What you see today is just a trailer of what’s in store for us with poverty, hunger, malnutrition and disease if we don’t pay heed to climate change,” said climate change and development expert Ali Tauqeer Sheikh. 

The Global Climate Risk Index 2021, an annual ranking from research group Germanwatch, ranks Pakistan eighth among countries most vulnerable to extreme weather caused by climate change.

From tailors and cobblers to repairmen, traders worry that without any concrete policies to cut climate change-related risks - especially at a time when financial pressures keep piling - their businesses could be swept away.

Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif formed a task force to mitigate the effects of climate change during an intense heatwave in May, and last week chaired a cabinet meeting to discuss the quick implementation of climate adaptation policies.

“Gone are the days when climate change was the subject of drawing room discussions. It is affecting our everyday life. Food and water security is directly linked to climate hazards,” he posted on Twitter after the meeting.

But for Talat Shaheen, a mother-of-six who intermittently lives and works at small home-based garment factories, the government needs to do more.

“Rains may be one factor, but factories are not getting work as the purchasing power of people has diminished since the pandemic,” said Shaheen, whose husband has been unemployed for two years.

On a good day she earns up to 1,000 rupees, but such days are “getting scarcer”.

“No work means sharing a 50 rupee-plate of cooked lentils and rice between the eight of us,” she said, adding that they were forced to starve with prices of basic items such as cooking oil and flour having nearly trebled.

“What can the poor eat?”

This story was published with permission from Thomson Reuters Foundation, the charitable arm of Thomson Reuters, that covers humanitarian news, climate change, resilience, women’s rights, trafficking and property rights. Visit http://news.trust.org/climate.

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