Pakistan Budget for FY 2026-27

If 6% GDP growth rate after 2 years of COVID triggers you, I am not sure if I have any solution fot you.
Brother it was fake growth which caused greater issues afterwards. It's been repeated to death on this forum multiple times by multiple members so I don't wanna go through it again but it wasn't a sign of success in anyways. But let's just agree to disagree IG cause I don't want to derail the thread.
 
I would argue despite facing COVID, Pakistan’s growth was better than the growth experienced in the last 4-5 years under the current government.

The current government has enjoyed an extended period of low oil prices, steady growth in world economy, and a one-page hybrid rule (one can argue its a martial law facade).

Despite all this, why is Pakistan’s growth stuttering? Is Pakistan not attractive enough to potential investors? Is there a flaw in Pakistan’s government machinery that the investors look elsewhere? Is the Pakistani workforce not smart enough? Some deep introspection required.
 

Pakistan’s outstanding sovereign guarantee exposure projected to cross Rs5 trillion by June 2027​

Government plans Rs907 billion in guarantees for Reko Diq, ML-3, C-5 power project and other projects; power sector accounts for 56% of current exposure


Pakistan’s outstanding sovereign guarantees and other contingent liabilities reached Rs4.32 trillion by the end of March 2026 and are projected to exceed Rs5 trillion by June 2027 as the government plans additional support for major energy, mining and infrastructure projects.

The government plans to issue guarantees worth Rs907 billion during fiscal year 2026-27, including the final quarter of FY26.

The proposed commitments include Rs223 billion for the Reko Diq mining project, Rs221 billion for the Nuclear C-5 1200MW power project and Rs113 billion for the ML-3 railway project.

Another Rs90 billion has been set aside for public-private partnership projects, while Rs80 billion is planned for credit guarantee schemes.

The proposed guarantee envelope also includes Rs50 billion each for the Water and Power Development Authority, Pakistan State Oil and miscellaneous or contingency requirements.

The National Grid Company of Pakistan may receive guarantees worth Rs19 billion, while Rs10 billion has been proposed for the Export-Import Bank of Pakistan.

The guarantees are primarily issued on behalf of state-owned enterprises to help them secure financing at lower costs, access concessional loans and fund infrastructure and operational requirements.


Although sovereign guarantees are not counted as direct public debt, they could become government liabilities if the borrowing entities fail to meet their repayment obligations.

Net guarantees projected at Rs683 billion

During the first nine months of FY26, the government issued or rolled over guarantees worth Rs769 billion, equivalent to 0.61% of gross domestic product.

The amount remained below the statutory annual ceiling of 2% of GDP prescribed under the Fiscal Responsibility and Debt Limitation framework.


After adjusting for an estimated Rs224 billion in repayments against existing guaranteed loans, net guarantee issuance is projected at Rs683 billion.

This would increase the outstanding stock from Rs4.32 trillion to around Rs5.005 trillion by the end of June 2027.

Power sector dominates exposure

The power sector accounts for Rs2.43 trillion, or 56%, of the government’s existing guarantee portfolio. The concentration reflects continued sovereign-backed borrowing by power-sector entities, including the Central Power Purchasing Agency-Guaranteed.



Circular debt, payment delays and liquidity constraints across the electricity supply chain have kept the power sector the largest source of contingent fiscal exposure.

Commodity operations represent the second-largest category, accounting for Rs895 billion, or 21%, of outstanding guarantees.

These guarantees support procurement and storage operations undertaken by the Trading Corporation of Pakistan and the Pakistan Agricultural Storage and Services Corporation.

Major state-owned entities


At the institutional level, the Pakistan Atomic Energy Commission has the largest exposure, followed by the Central Power Purchasing Agency-Guaranteed and PASSCO.

Pakistan State Oil and the Water and Power Development Authority are also among the principal recipients of sovereign guarantees because of their roles in energy and infrastructure financing.

Guarantees linked to the aviation sector stand at Rs269 billion, while financial-sector exposure amounts to Rs166 billion. Other categories account for another Rs567 billion.

Interest rate and maturity risks


Around 51% of guaranteed obligations carry floating interest rates, while the remaining 49% are based on fixed rates. Most of the underlying loans have maturities of around five years, creating continuing refinancing and rollover requirements.

The planned guarantees for FY27 are expected to expand the government’s contingent exposure further, with energy, mining, railways and state-owned enterprises remaining the main sources of risk.
 
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EDITORIAL:Official post-budget media briefings in Pakistan are carefully choreographed affairs, full of reassuring phrases like ‘moving in the right direction’, ‘resilience’, and ‘enabling business and investment environment’ delivered by the keepers of the public exchequer.

After the briefings end, journalists walk away with little they did not already know. The post-budget presser by Finance Minister Muhammad Aurangzeb was no different.

While talking with the characteristic confidence of a bank executive, he could not quite paper over the tension at the heart of the new budget: a document trying to be a relief budget, a growth budget and a consolidation budget all at once — and only partially succeeding at each.

Read more: https://www.dawn.com/news/2007731
 
Brother it was fake growth which caused greater issues afterwards. It's been repeated to death on this forum multiple times by multiple members so I don't wanna go through it again but it wasn't a sign of success in anyways. But let's just agree to disagree IG cause I don't want to derail the thread.

Fake growth ? The numbers were not even PTIs.. but let's leave it.

I am not here to change minds or to further the cause
 
Pension has become a big problem and will become unsustainable in near future. Without pension reform we are looking at yet another abyss.
 
@RocketLaw

The Government of Pakistan has announced a increase of 39.62% in funding for defense physical assets,


Well, Pakistan lives in a tough neighbourhood and has no choice but to raise defense spending.

Regards


Taking "we will eat grass" to a whole new level.

It seems we have developed appetite for it and now finding reasons to continue eating grass.
 

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