Pakistan avoided default. Its people absorbed the cost.
When International Monetary Fund spokesperson Julie Kozack confirmed that Pakistan’s Extended Fund Facility had “helped stabilise the economy and rebuild confidence,” it sounded like a victory lap. A primary fiscal surplus. A current account surplus for the first time in fourteen years. Another review scheduled. Another tranche—roughly $1 billion—within reach.
On paper, the programme is working.
On the ground, the picture is harsher.
Milk prices have surged. Gas bills swallow daily wages. Small shopkeepers operate on shrinking margins. Vendors who once sold by the kilogram now sell by the handful. Families cut back on food before they cut back on anything else.
The government points to macroeconomic stabilization. Citizens point to their receipts.
These two realities coexist—but they do not reconcile.
The Surplus That Cost the Public
The IMF highlights a 1.3% primary fiscal surplus. In theory, that signals discipline. In practice, it was achieved through compressed development spending, suffocated imports, and interest rates that climbed above 22% at their peak.
That rate did not discipline the powerful. It froze the small.
For a major conglomerate with political connections, financing remains accessible. For a small manufacturer or trader, credit became functionally unreachable. Investment slowed. Expansion halted. Hiring froze.
Austerity can balance a ledger. It cannot generate prosperity.
When a state claims success because it spends less while its citizens pay more, the celebration rings hollow.
Debt First. Everything Else Later.
Before schools are funded or hospitals supplied, more than half of federal revenue goes to servicing debt. Pakistan’s total public debt stands above 70% of GDP—well beyond the 60% ceiling once enshrined in law.
That ceiling is now ceremonial.
Each IMF programme adds new conditions—64 in the current arrangement alone. Targets are missed. Waivers are granted. Reviews proceed. Disbursements arrive. The cycle continues.
Since 1958, Pakistan has entered 24 IMF programmes. Not one ended with structural independence from the next.
Stabilization has become a recurring subscription.
Structural Evasion at the Top
The core dysfunction remains untouched: those with the greatest capacity to pay contribute the least proportionally.
Agricultural income—concentrated among politically connected landowners—remains lightly taxed. Real estate enjoys loopholes and valuation games. Informal retail resists documentation. Military-linked commercial interests operate in protected fiscal zones civilian policymakers rarely challenge.
Even the IMF’s own governance diagnostics—published as part of reform commitments—acknowledge tax complexity, weak procurement transparency, and limited asset accountability.
The findings are documented.
The incentives remain unchanged.
The Vote of No Confidence You Can’t See
Pakistan’s investment rate has fallen to 13.1% of GDP, the lowest in five decades. That figure is more revealing than any press briefing.
It represents millions of decisions:
- A factory owner deciding not to expand.
- A family pulling a child from private school.
- A skilled graduate applying abroad.
- A shopkeeper choosing survival over growth.
When capital and talent hesitate, they are delivering the most honest economic verdict available.
Geopolitics and Gentle Treatment
The IMF does not operate in a vacuum. The United States is its largest shareholder, and geopolitical realities shape institutional tone.
Strategic usefulness often buys patience.
Pakistan today is considered too important to fail abruptly. That ensures liquidity. It does not ensure reform.
Avoiding default is not transformation. It is damage control.
Stabilized Is Not Solved
Yes, the immediate crisis has been contained. The rupee has steadied. External payments are being met. Catastrophic default has been avoided.
But stabilization is the floor, not the ceiling.
What remains absent from the agenda is politically costly reform:
- A tax system that meaningfully reaches concentrated wealth.
- Transparent procurement insulated from patronage.
- Equal application of fiscal rules.
- A credible environment for long-term private investment.
Until those changes occur, every programme risks becoming a bridge to the next programme.
The IMF can declare stability. Markets can acknowledge it. Officials can circulate the quotes.
But stabilization that does not translate into opportunity feels abstract to those carrying its burden.
Avoiding collapse is an achievement.
Building resilience is the unfinished task.






