Pakistanithinktank
Registered Member
Pakistan is once again at a crossroads with the IMF. The Fund is telling the government the same thing it has been saying for years, fix your fuel pricing, stop blanket subsidies, and clean up governance especially in institutions like NAB. The IMF isn’t asking for cosmetic changes; it wants the system to become transparent, predictable, and rules-based.
The government, meanwhile, is trying to juggle politics and economics. It gave a massive petroleum subsidy during the global oil shock, and although the IMF didn’t object at the time, it now wants Pakistan to unwind these distortions quickly. Petrol price cuts have made things even tighter, and the IMF is signaling that next year’s budget will need serious restructuring.
On governance, the IMF is pushing harder than before. It wants the NAB chairman to be chosen through a transparent, multi-party commission not through backdoor political deals. It also wants asset declarations of top civil servants made public. In short, the IMF wants Pakistan to stop running institutions like personal fiefdoms.
Even as IMF officials praise “progress,” the underlying message remains unchanged, Pakistan’s economy cannot survive without deep, painful, and unavoidable reforms.
And in the forum discussion, one voice cuts through the technical jargon, Pakistan’s economy isn’t “struggling,” it’s being kept struggling. According to that view, the establishment benefits from a weak economy because it keeps the public dependent and the political class controllable. A strong, confident economy would reduce their leverage, so the system stays on life support.
“I can guarantee that if Pakistan dismantles the provincial system and makes Economic Zones the second tier of government, 50% to 70% of government overhead will be reduced.”
This reflects a broader belief shared by many analysts. Pakistan’s administrative structure is bloated, outdated, and designed for political patronage rather than efficiency. A leaner, zone‑based economic governance model could reduce duplication, shrink bureaucracy, and cut massive overhead costs but it would also reduce the influence of those who benefit from the current system.
So, the tension remains, The IMF wants reforms. Pakistan needs reforms. But the system resists reforms because real reform shifts power.
Until those changes, Pakistan will keep returning to the IMF with the same problems, the same warnings, and the same cycle of temporary fixes.
The government, meanwhile, is trying to juggle politics and economics. It gave a massive petroleum subsidy during the global oil shock, and although the IMF didn’t object at the time, it now wants Pakistan to unwind these distortions quickly. Petrol price cuts have made things even tighter, and the IMF is signaling that next year’s budget will need serious restructuring.
On governance, the IMF is pushing harder than before. It wants the NAB chairman to be chosen through a transparent, multi-party commission not through backdoor political deals. It also wants asset declarations of top civil servants made public. In short, the IMF wants Pakistan to stop running institutions like personal fiefdoms.
Even as IMF officials praise “progress,” the underlying message remains unchanged, Pakistan’s economy cannot survive without deep, painful, and unavoidable reforms.
And in the forum discussion, one voice cuts through the technical jargon, Pakistan’s economy isn’t “struggling,” it’s being kept struggling. According to that view, the establishment benefits from a weak economy because it keeps the public dependent and the political class controllable. A strong, confident economy would reduce their leverage, so the system stays on life support.
“I can guarantee that if Pakistan dismantles the provincial system and makes Economic Zones the second tier of government, 50% to 70% of government overhead will be reduced.”
This reflects a broader belief shared by many analysts. Pakistan’s administrative structure is bloated, outdated, and designed for political patronage rather than efficiency. A leaner, zone‑based economic governance model could reduce duplication, shrink bureaucracy, and cut massive overhead costs but it would also reduce the influence of those who benefit from the current system.
So, the tension remains, The IMF wants reforms. Pakistan needs reforms. But the system resists reforms because real reform shifts power.
Until those changes, Pakistan will keep returning to the IMF with the same problems, the same warnings, and the same cycle of temporary fixes.


