Times of Pakistan

Euphoric picture

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Forecasting an optimistic picture of growth for Pakistan, the Asian Development Bank is confident that the economy will grow, and sustained reforms could stabilise it in the next two years. The Manila-based lender, in a change of heart from its previous predictions, now believes that Pakistan will sustain a GDP growth rate up to 3.5% for the current fiscal year, and could bolster it to 4.5% in FY2027. This upgrade is quite surprising from the country's own estimates of less than 3%, despite an odd situation at home and abroad. It is a foregone conclusion that chips are down in the form of a simmering energy crisis, a plummeting industrial production, and an unpredictable agricultural output owing to climatic changes.

The ADB, in its outlook for 2026, has primarily entrusted its hope in manufacturing and investment realms, as the lender's policies are strictly being implemented by Islamabad. Thus, it hopes for inflation to restrain in the orbit of 6.4%, with the central bank expected to ease monetary policy to achieve medium-term targets range of 5 to 7%. In such a scenario, the rupee's strength must remain stable and remittances stay in safe territory along with exports picking up from the present sordid state of affairs. That is why Asia's prime donor has warned of the flip side as the turmoil in the Middle East and a rupture in the supply chain of fuel and commodities could derail the entire hope line.

Pakistan, with foreign exchange reserves of less than $16 billion, has a mounting task to handle as energy prices are appreciating and LNG gas supplies have shrunk. Likewise, the recent rise in oil prices has set in a snowball reaction, limiting the purchasing power of the common man, as FDIs too are in a slump. And with the highest electricity tariff in the region, Pakistan's produce becomes untenable in markets which is where the growth paradigm is likely to be adversely impacted. The need of the hour is to opt for genuine austerity, ploughing gaps in revenue generation and focusing on an export-led industrialisation.

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