4 June 2021 Islamabad
Inclusive wealth, a measure of Pakistan’s prosperity and sustainability that accounts for social, economic and environmental factors has been on the rise consistently since 1992, a new UN Environment Programme (UNEP) report shows.
The report, Inclusive Wealth of Pakistan: The Case for Investing in Natural Capital and Restoration, assessed Pakistan’s Inclusive Wealth, a measure of economic and environmental well-being that includes factors typically overlooked by indicators like Gross Domestic Product (GDP). This framework counts the social value rather than the dollar price of assets such as natural, human, and produced capital, to provide a more holistic approach to economic monitoring and management.
Between 1992 and 2019, Pakistan’s inclusive wealth increased at an average of 2.3% annually.
Human capital and produced capital were responsible for the bulk of the increase, growing at a rate of 2.9% and 3.2%, respectively. Unfortunately, over the same period, natural capital declined annually by 0.1% on average. However, the last five years have shown evidence of an environmental turnaround, with forests, grassland, sparsely vegetated areas and water bodies all growing in area since 2015. Shrubland and wetlands remained static, while cropland receded. Future progress will depend on ensuring more investment in natural capital.
“Pakistan understands that inclusive, sustainable economic growth means tending to the engines of growth: people and nature,” said Malik Amin Aslam, Federal Minister of Climate Change for Pakistan. “This is why we have devoted ourselves to efforts like afforestation, marine protection, and ecosystem restoration. We want a future for Pakistan where the natural beauty of the country is not only restored but managed capably to support the well-being of Pakistanis.”
The bounce back in forest cover in recent years is likely attributable to restoration policy and tree plantation schemes under the Ten Billion Tree Tsunami Programme (TBTTP), the report says. Human capital has also benefitted from these initiatives through employment, health improvements and poverty alleviation. The TBTTP has restored hundreds of thousands of hectares of forest and is estimated to have created 85,000 jobs in tree nurseries alone.
The recent gains remain precarious, however. The report underlines that levels of natural capital are insufficient for current economic production and wealth accumulation. Further increases in inclusive wealth will depend on environmental and social considerations being properly integrated into planning and development strategies.