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Over 650 reforms carried out last year: report

Dawn Report
Published February 10, 2026


ISLAMABAD: The government carried out more than 650 governance reforms, across 135 federal ministries, divisions and affiliated institutions during the previous year, according to a new report.

The Pakistan Reforms Report 2026, unveiled in the capital on Monday, showed that the country’s focus had shifted from crisis stabilisation to long-term state capacity, with the energy sector leading the tally with 118 reforms enacted, followed by the legal sector with 96, and digital governance and IT in third place with 74 initiatives.

According to a statement from Mishal Pakistan — the organisation behind the report — it aims to document changes in governance to help stakeholders understand how systems are changing, how reforms are being institutionalised, and how these changes may shape citizens’ lives and state capacity over time.

The authors make it clear that this is not a performance evaluation or political scorecard, rather, the report situates reforms within the challenging context of 2025, marked by fiscal pressures, regional security dynamics, internal insurgencies, and geopolitical tensions.

Despite these constraints, reform momentum remained intact, particularly in digitisation, institutional coordination, and regulatory modernisation, the statement said.

Of the nearly 660 reform measures highlighted, the report points to 160-190 measures directly created or improved public-facing access, including portals, complaint systems, mobile applications and digital certificates.

“Citizens experience governance not through policy documents, but through electricity bills, court delays, visa processing times, digital portals, grievance redress mechanisms, and the predictability of rules that affect their livelihoods,” it notes.
 

Over 650 reforms carried out last year: report

Dawn Report
Published February 10, 2026

ISLAMABAD: The government carried out more than 650 governance reforms, across 135 federal ministries, divisions and affiliated institutions during the previous year, according to a new report.

The Pakistan Reforms Report 2026, unveiled in the capital on Monday, showed that the country’s focus had shifted from crisis stabilisation to long-term state capacity, with the energy sector leading the tally with 118 reforms enacted, followed by the legal sector with 96, and digital governance and IT in third place with 74 initiatives.

According to a statement from Mishal Pakistan — the organisation behind the report — it aims to document changes in governance to help stakeholders understand how systems are changing, how reforms are being institutionalised, and how these changes may shape citizens’ lives and state capacity over time.

The authors make it clear that this is not a performance evaluation or political scorecard, rather, the report situates reforms within the challenging context of 2025, marked by fiscal pressures, regional security dynamics, internal insurgencies, and geopolitical tensions.

Despite these constraints, reform momentum remained intact, particularly in digitisation, institutional coordination, and regulatory modernisation, the statement said.

Of the nearly 660 reform measures highlighted, the report points to 160-190 measures directly created or improved public-facing access, including portals, complaint systems, mobile applications and digital certificates.

“Citizens experience governance not through policy documents, but through electricity bills, court delays, visa processing times, digital portals, grievance redress mechanisms, and the predictability of rules that affect their livelihoods,” it notes.


Now. Can we link that to performance of these institutes in comparison to previous years ?
 
Now. Can we link that to performance of these institutes in comparison to previous years ?
Initial reforms will last 5 years. This is year 2 of that plan.

If the next Government whichever it is continues with the current reforms instead of throwing them out of window and coming up with newer version of reforms, then we'll be back to square like Pakistan had been until 2022, otherwise we will continue to see steady growth like China saw for 30 years before it marched ahead of everybody.
 

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