Finance Priest Ishaq Dar Saturday conceded that his administration was dealing with a "Plan-B" if the Worldwide Money related Asset (IMF) doesn't deliver the forthcoming credit for Pakistan — which is truly necessary as the country faces a potential default on outer installments. "Plan-B is dependably there: confidence and remaining on your own feet [...] we can't discuss it much openly. In any case, Insha'Allah, Pakistan won't default," the money serve said during his post-spending plan question and answer session. The desperate country, with stores to scarcely meet a month of imports, is embraced moves toward secure a $1.1 billion credit, part of a $6.5 billion IMF bailout bundle, which has been deferred since November, with over 100 days gone since the last staff-level mission to Pakistan, the longest such postponement since something like 2008. Considering a shortfall of a bailout program, getting outside supporting will be a difficult undertaki...