The $2b debt forms part of Pakistan's foreign exchange reserves of $16b. Pakistan is paying about $130 million annually in interest on the UAE debt at current rates. In 2018, the UAE charged an interest rate of 3% on the debt, but last year increased it to 6.5%. Pakistan has requested the UAE to reduce the rate to around 3%, citing improvements in its credit rating and lower global interest rates.
Pressure on exports
The governor further highlighted that, despite the ongoing pressure on
exports, the situation was being managed. This, he noted, was partially due to declining food prices globally, including a reduction in rice exports, which alone accounted for a $1b drop.
Regarding inflation, the SBP governor projected that it was expected to stay between 5% and 7% this year.
“In 2022, the current account deficit was $17.5 billion, but through strategic measures, we managed to reduce it to just 1% of GDP in 2023, with a surplus of $2b,” he explained. Ahmad pointed out that this marked the first current account surplus in 14 years.
He further stated that foreign exchange reserves had increased significantly, from $2.8b, just enough for two weeks of imports, to over
$16b. His target, the governor said, was is to raise the reserves to $18b by the end of June 2026 and to $20b by December 2026.