
It is also interesting to note that the land reforms passed under Z. Bhutto were very minor, and left intact agrarian structures and landholding patterns. Critics noted that Bhutto's plans mostly targeted financial and industrial capitalists, leaving intact the zamindars (feudal landlords) that formed his constituency and contributed to rural inequality and exploitation (see more below).
While privatization was touted and initiated by the military dictator Zia, it would actually pick up speed under Benazir Bhutto in 1988. It was her administration that consolidated the different privatization committees, and embarked on the trio of 'liberalization, privatization, and deregulation' with the aid of British consultants, (she also had the dubious distinction of signing the first Pakistani structural adjustment packages of the 80's with the IMF and the World Bank).
While privatization was touted and initiated by the military dictator Zia, it would actually pick up speed under Benazir Bhutto in 1988. It was her administration that consolidated the different privatization committees, and embarked on the trio of 'liberalization, privatization, and deregulation' with the aid of British consultants, (she also had the dubious distinction of signing the first Pakistani structural adjustment packages of the 80's with the IMF and the World Bank).

One thing should be clear: that Benazir Bhutto's, Sharif's, and Zia's economic policies aligned quite nicely with the 'Washington Consensus,' whereas Zulfikar Bhutto's did not. There has been no substantive disagreement between all of the former on the whole-hog benefits of private capitalism, and the Adam Smith version of little government economic intervention. Z. Bhutto belonged more firmly to a Keynesian framework: a big state push that took control of finance and industrial development, riding on the back of a public sentiment in boil over the vast extent of poverty and inequality. The genius of Z. Bhutto lay in channeling this sentiment against some of the 22 most wealthy families of Pakistan, who collectively controlled two-thirds of industry, and over 90% of the banking and insurance industries. Bhutto called them “robber barons” on January 1st, 1974 as he explained why the banking and insurance industries had been nationalized (Ur-Rehman, 1998). But Bhutto's socialist politics stopped short; he was not anti-capitalist, and he most definitely was not opposed to exploitation, as evidenced by his continuing support of agrarian feudalism. Not a single one of Pakistan's recent heads of state, going as far back so as to include Zulfikar Bhutto, have moved to break the power of Zamindari (feudalism). Zamindari was barely nicked in the agrarian reforms of the 70's. In the 1972 land reform, in-family land transfers meant hardly any land actually changed hands. And in the second, land was purchased at over-inflated prices, resulting sometimes in an increase in asset value for the landlords. All in all, less than 10% of land was re-distributed in the combined land reforms of 1959, 1972, and 1977 (Husain 1999).
One may wonder what it would take to change Pakistan, and to transform feudalism. This can be approached from two angles. The first is to recognize that such changes have always been bloody and difficult, requiring and marshaling collective forces acting domestically and internationally. Feudalism is pernicious in various ways: it seeps into culture, ideology, music, poetry, the arts (zamindars have always been life-sustaining patrons of classical music and the arts in Pakistan). It regulates daily life in mundane and dramatic ways, and is naturalized with the adjective 'ancestral.'

oh its so sad.
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