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Walter Faber's avatar

Pakistan looks like a perfect example for the relationship between extractive political institutions and extractive economical institutions as described in "Why Nations Fail".

Elites often sacrifice the long term development of the country for their short term gain and to maintain their elite status.

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Uday's avatar

The problem with Pakistani society is that as the original thought behind the birth of Pakistan namely that Muslims cannot prosper under a secular Hindu majority nation, was essentially a negation of the idea of India, they view any success of India through the prism that India's success is a failure of the idea of Pakistan. However their formula for dealing with this problem has been to undermine India's success by encouraging ethnic conflict in India, rather than investing in their own economic capabilities.

The author seems to have fallen into the same trap, by talking up persecution of India's minorities. Fact remains that Muslims in India are doing much better than Muslims in Pakistan, the population of Muslims since independence has actually grown by over 4% (from 10% to 14%) while Muslims are poorer than Hindus on average, many of them are part of India's cultural and business elite. If one wanted to write of persecution the decline of Hindus in Pakistan's population from 15% at independence to about 1% might be more fertile ground.

Also not noted in this article is that when there have been multiple attempts, largely from the Indian side, to talk peace (Lahore summit by AB Vajpayee, Agra summit, Manmohan Singh's talks in 2008-09, Modi's visit to Pakistan in 2015) each time it has been undermined by hardliners in Pakistan. India today IMO views relations with Pakistan as a problem that cannot be solved and something where you just need to take care the nuisance value does not go beyond a point. If Pakistan needs to come out of the hole it is in, it needs to cut defence spending, initiate real land reforms (not the kind where the Bhutto family owns a quarter million acres of land post said reform), invest in non-religions education (as far as I can tell the reverse is happening), and build infrastructure and factories rather than nuclear bombs. However fear mongering of India has been tremendously profitable to the Pakistan elite and I don't see why they would step back from that. Any respite due to their economic slowdown may be temporary and if things improve they are likely to move back to the status quo.

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