Pakistan's Precarious Progress

Islamabad, the capital of Pakistan, showcases the regime's ambitions through opulent modern architecture. Yet, these ostentatious buildings fail to conceal the profound poverty afflicting ordinary Pakistanis. Economic inequality is glaring. Generals in polished uniforms proudly announce acquisitions of advanced Chinese military technology, including J-10C fighter jets. A few streets away, marketplaces teem with discontented citizens struggling with rampant inflation and food shortages. This stark juxtaposition encapsulates Pakistan's economic dilemma.

Pakistan's economic record mirrors that of a persistently failing student. Since 1950, the country has undergone over 25 IMF bailout programs—only Argentina surpasses Pakistan both in number and magnitude of aid received. The recent Stand-By Arrangement (SBA) of 2023–2024, providing a $3 billion loan to stave off bankruptcy, has given way to the Extended Fund Facility (EFF), which runs until 2027, offering an additional $7 billion contingent on structural reforms.

However, Pakistan’s economic malaise is far more entrenched. Not even these repeated bailouts have reversed its decline. In the early 1970s, average incomes in Pakistan were higher than in Sri Lanka and exceeded those in Bangladesh and India by over 60%. Today, Sri Lanka's average income is double Pakistan's, and it lags significantly behind Bangladesh and India. These economic setbacks have tangible demographic consequences. In 1972, life expectancy in Pakistan was seven years greater than India's, standing at 55 years. Today, India's life expectancy is 67 years compared to Pakistan's 66, marking a long-term systemic deterioration.

Pakistan’s precarious economy is further strained by its rivalry with India. In 2024, military spending reached $10.4 billion (2.6% of GDP), with planned increases for fiscal years 2025–2026. Even stringent IMF conditions have failed to prompt budget cuts in defence. Funds thus diverted from critical sectors like education and healthcare exacerbate socio-economic instability. The government defends such spending as essential due to ongoing conflicts with India, arguing defeat would devastate the economy. Border skirmishes threaten Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif’s economic revival plan, Uraan Pakistan, jeopardising its ambitious targets. Skirmishes along the Indian border risk burying Pakistan’s economic ambitions.

Why is Debt at 94% of GDP Problematic?

Like many nations, Pakistan’s public debt surged amid the COVID-19 pandemic, reaching 94% of GDP in 2020. While this figure might not alarm European observers—France and Belgium have debts of 113% and 104% of GDP respectively—the problem lies in the disproportionate size of Pakistan’s debt relative to its budget. Pakistani debt surpasses its annual budget sevenfold; if France faced a similar scenario, its debt would equate to approximately 322% of GDP.

Debt servicing further burdens Pakistan’s economy, consuming 45% of the 18.8 trillion PKR budget. Historically, debt payments exceeding 25% of budgetary income are unsustainable. Until Pakistan reduces this ratio, a prolonged economic crisis remains inevitable. Adding to this vulnerability, foreign borrowing in dollars, primarily for oil imports constituting 20-40% of total imports, amplifies the crisis. 

Between 2022 and 2023, the Pakistani rupee halved in value against the dollar, significantly escalating foreign debt repayment costs. Pakistan thus finds itself ensnared in a classic debt trap, exacerbated by limited tax revenues, as only a small fraction of Pakistanis pay income tax.

Hope in the Form of Uraan Pakistan

Amid these dire circumstances, the Uraan Pakistan initiative offers some hope. The government aims to revitalise the economy within five years, targeting a consistent GDP growth rate of 6% by 2028. Central to this plan is doubling exports to $60 billion, focusing on textiles, agriculture, and IT services—a formidable challenge given 2023 exports stood at $28 billion. Inspired by India’s digital progress, Pakistan aims to train 200,000 IT professionals annually and expand mobile connectivity to over 100 million users. However, even disregarding concerns about training quality, Pakistan will trail India, which currently trains between 500,000 and 1 million IT professionals each year.

Another significant objective of the Uraan Pakistan initiative is transforming the energy sector by reducing reliance on fossil fuels, notably through enhanced cooperation with China, beyond military and logistical support which is already present. Chinese solar technology is helping increase energy independence, crucial for economic empowerment and demographic potential.

Yet Uraan Pakistan overlooks critical structural inefficiencies, notably state enterprises such as Pakistan International Airlines and an oversized bureaucracy comprising 39 federal divisions and 33 ministries. Nevertheless, initial signs are positive: by February 2025, inflation had fallen to 1.5%, merchandise exports rose by 7.1%, and the IT sector recorded an impressive 28% annual growth, reducing the immediate bankruptcy risk by 93%.

The ultimate question remains whether the government can translate these preliminary successes into enduring economic transformation, or if military ambitions will plunge Pakistan into yet another lost decade. Unless the administration demonstrates political courage to curtail military expenditure and reform bloated state institutions, Uraan Pakistan risks remaining a grounded dream.

Statement

Pakistan stands at a familiar crossroads: shiny jets in the sky,  poverty on the ground. Decades of IMF bailouts—now 25 and counting—have failed to halt its economic slide. The Uraan Pakistan initiative promises a leap: export booms, tech revolutions, solar-powered resilience. Yet it skirts the real culprits—militarism, elite capture, structural inertia. Growth is possible, even visible, but fragile.