Raja Porus
Registered Member
I would highly recommend you (in fact every Pakistani) to read Aitzaz's Indus Saga. Really takes you on a roller coaster ride through our history allowing you to understand individual and collective thought process of a Pakistani and how it was shaped which can be summarised as:I actually think the caution in your post is fair, but the bearishness goes a bit too far because it ignores another deeply Pakistani national characteristic...
The same low effort, improvised, dysfunctional culture you are describing also produces a weird kind of short-term crisis resilience. Pakistan repeatedly stumbles into the wall, then somehow patches together just enough elite consensus, external financing, coercive discipline, and social adjustment to avoid the full collapse that confident doomers keep predicting. That is not strength in the healthy sense, but it is still a real pattern, and by now it should be obvious that Pakistan is often better at surviving crises in the short run than reforming itself in the long run.
That is where the “resilience narrative” actually matters. Pakistan has repeatedly used IMF programs, emergency financing, fiscal tightening, remittances, and administrative controls to stabilize after near crisis moments, including the recent period when it moved away from imminent default and restored a degree of stability. Even the World Bank’s recent assessment describes the gains as fragile rather than nonexistent, which is an important distinction.
So yes, there are plenty of reasons to be cautious, especially on governance, productivity, poverty, and long term trajectory, but those same realities should also make people cautious about being too bullish on imminent collapse. Pakistan’s story for decades has been short term wins, longer holds, and delayed consequences, and any serious leader should have recognized early that this survival capacity can become its own trap.
Just enough resilience to avoid reform
BUT
Never enough reform to escape the cycle.
"Khada peeta lahe da, baqi Ahmed shahe da"



