"So what we're expecting is that through the first half of this year, inflation is going to average about 33% and then might trend a little bit lower after that," she added.
The consumer price index rose 27.5% year-on-year in January, its highest in nearly half a century.
Low income households could remain under extreme pressure as a result of high inflation on account of being disproportionately exposed to non-discretionary items.
"Food prices are high and they can't avoid paying for that, so we're going to see higher poverty rates as well feed through," the economist said.
NO OVERNIGHT FIX
Ell said Pakistan has not has a great track record when it comes to IMF bailouts, so infusing additional funds alone may prove to be of little use.
"If we're going to see any improvement, it's going to be very gradual. There's just no overnight fix," she said.
The weaker rupee, which is plumbing record lows, is adding to imported inflation while domestically high energy costs on the back of tariff increases and still elevated food prices is likely to keep inflation high.
Moody's expects economic growth for the 2023 calendar year of around 2.1%.
"It is likely that we will see further monetary tightening in Pakistan to try and stabilise inflation and also with the weakness in the FX they might kind of intervene there to try and force in stability, but again it's not going to be a silver bullet," Ell said.
Last month, the central bank raised its key interest rate by 100 basis points (bps) to 17% in a bid to rein in persistent price pressures. It has raised the key rate by a total of 725 bps since January 2022.
With significant recession-type conditions in Pakistan, skyrocketing borrowing costs could really exacerbate domestic demand struggles, she said.
"You really need to see sustained sound macroeconomic management, and just injecting further funds in there without decent backing is not going to deliver the results that you're looking for."
<^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ FACTBOX-What has Pakistan agreed so far with the IMF? ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^> (Reporting by Swati Bhat; Editing by Kim Coghill)
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