Pakistan confident has met action plan, will exit FATF's grey list this week

In this file photo, members of the Financial Action Task Force (FATF) meet for a plenary meeting on February 19, 2020, in Paris, France. (Photo courtesy: FATFNews/Twitter)
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Updated 22 February 2021
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Pakistan confident has met action plan, will exit FATF's grey list this week

  • Pakistan says has made significant regulatory progress to comply with the financial watchdog's requirements
  • Experts say all will depend on Pakistan's diplomatic outreach as it may face resistance from US and France

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan is hopeful this week's meeting of the Financial Action Task Force (FATF) will remove it from an international “grey list” of nations falling short of global money laundering rules, officials said on Sunday.

The global watchdog put Pakistan onto the list in 2018 at the urging of the United States. In the last plenary meeting in October, FATF announced that Pakistan would remain on its grey list until February for not meeting six out of 27 action plan items on curbing money laundering that benefited terrorism groups.

FATF's upcoming virtual plenary meeting will be held in Paris from Monday to Thursday.

"We hope that the FATF plenary would acknowledge and appreciate our actions,” Pakistan’s foreign office spokesperson Zahid Hafeez Chaudhri told Arab News.

"FATF is a technical body, and we expect it to take a decision based on the merits of our case," he said, adding that Islamabad has been fully committed to implementing the remaining points and undertook "painstaking efforts" towards this end.

"In the remaining six partially addressed items, significant progress has been made by Pakistan, which is duly acknowledged by the wider FATF membership," Chaudhri said.

To comply with the watchdog's requirements, Pakistan last year passed new legislations that include actions for freezing and seizure of assets and travel bans and arms embargoes on entities and individuals designated on UN sanctions' lists. They also introduce measures to impose heavy fines and long-term jail sentences on those involved in terror financing.

According to Dr. Abid Qayyum Sulehri, member of the government’s Economic Advisory Council, Pakistan's regulatory processes have been very satisfactory and now all will depend on diplomacy.
 
"There is no major bottleneck in the legislations or other action plans. It is now purely depending upon diplomatic outreach by Pakistan. Islamabad has to increase its diplomatic efforts to get required 13 votes to come out of the grey list," he said, adding that Pakistan may face some resistance from France and the US.

France, Sulehri told Arab News, may want to keep Pakistan on the grey list as earlier this month Islamabad reached an agreement with a hardline religious party to discuss in parliament severing ties with Paris as French President Emmanuel Macron recently defended the publication of cartoons depicting Prophet Muhammad.

Resistance from the US, Sulehri added, may come "due to its concern over the acquittal of Omar Sheikh one of the accused in Daniel Pearl murder case."

In late January, a top Pakistani court ordered the release of Ahmed Omar Sheikh, a British-born Pakistani convicted of the 2002 kidnapping and beheading of American journalist Daniel Pearl.

Dr. Zubair Khan, an economist and financial politics expert, said pressure to keep Pakistan on the grey list may also be due to regional politics as the US and India "want to keep Pakistan under pressure for their regional gains."

"We have laws in place which are being implemented. The laws are passed by the parliament and the FATF member countries, which themselves campaign for democratic norms, should give the Pakistani parliament its due time to complete its process on legislation," Khan said.

"It is high time to make FATF a meaningful body and stop using it for political purposes."


Pakistan showcases fiscal turnaround, reform agenda at Saudi-hosted AlUla forum

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Pakistan showcases fiscal turnaround, reform agenda at Saudi-hosted AlUla forum

  • Pakistan has delivered successive primary surpluses and reduced its fiscal deficit from around 8 percent of GDP to approximately 5.4 percent
  • Muhammad Aurangzeb says fiscal space created through consolidation, reforms is being directed toward priority growth-enabling sectors

KARACHI: Finance Minister Muhammad Aurangzeb on Monday highlighted Pakistan’s recent fiscal progress, ongoing reforms and strategy to build buffers while sustaining growth at the AlUla Conference for Emerging Market Economies, underscoring the importance of institutional strengthening in navigating economic and climate-related shocks.

The second edition of the annual AlUla conference was launched by the Saudi Arabia’s Ministry of Finance and the International Monetary Fund (IMF) on Sunday. The conference brings together economic decision-makers, finance ministers, central bank governors, leaders of international financial institutions and a select group of experts and specialists from around the world.

Pakistan, which nearly defaulted on its foreign debt obligations in 2023, is currently making efforts to stabilize its economy under a $7 billion International Monetary Fund (IMF) program. The program, agreed in Sept. 2024, accompanied reforms such as privatization of loss-making, state-owned enterprises (SOEs), tax regime overhaul and ending various subsidies for fiscal consolidation.

Attending a high-level panel discussion “Fiscal Policy in a Shock‑Prone World” on the 2nd day of the AlUla Conference, Aurangzeb shared Pakistan’s experience in managing structural constraints, strengthening revenue mobilization, reducing debt vulnerabilities, and responding to shocks while protecting priority development spending.

“Pakistan’s fiscal strategy has been shaped by a history of boom-and-bust cycles, persistent structural deficits, high debt levels, and limited fiscal space,” he said, stressing that it has been critical to carefully safeguard the fiscal progress achieved over the past two to three years.

“Pakistan has delivered successive primary surpluses and reduced its fiscal deficit from around 8 percent of GDP (gross domestic product) to approximately 5.4 percent, with the current trajectory pointing toward a further reduction below five percent.”

This year’s conference highlighted the rapid transformations in the global economy and challenges and the opportunities they presented for emerging market economies, particularly in international trade, monetary and financial systems.

Aurangzeb stressed the discussion around fiscal buffers is not academic for Pakistan but rooted in lived experience as a climate-vulnerable country.

Recalling the catastrophic floods of 2022, he noted that Pakistan was forced to make an immediate international appeal even for rescue and relief operations. In contrast, he said, the country was able to mobilize its own resources despite limited fiscal space during the large-scale floods affecting multiple provinces and river systems this year, demonstrating the practical value of rebuilding fiscal buffers to absorb exogenous shocks.

On the revenue side, he outlined sustained efforts to expand the tax base and strengthen compliance.

“Pakistan’s tax-to-GDP ratio has risen from below 10 percent to close to 12 percent,” the minister said, highlighting the transformation of the tax authority through reforms in people, processes and technology, including the use of AI-led production monitoring systems across various sectors to improve enforcement, curb leakages and reduce corruption by minimizing human intervention.

“The tax policy function has been separated from tax collection and placed within the Ministry of Finance to ensure that budgetary decisions are guided by economic value and policy considerations rather than purely arithmetic targets, while maintaining overall fiscal discipline.”

About expenditure management, the finance minister noted that Pakistan’s federal structure adds complexity, requiring close coordination between the federation and provinces. He shared that a national fiscal framework has been agreed upon and that work is ongoing to strengthen fiscal coordination and discipline across all tiers of government.

“Pakistan’s debt-to-GDP ratio, which had reached around 74 percent, has been reduced to approximately 70 percent,” he said, underscoring ongoing domestic liability management operations aimed at lowering debt servicing costs, which remain the single largest expenditure item in the budget.

“Continued fiscal discipline would further ease debt pressures and help create additional fiscal space.”

Pakistan faced a prolonged economic crisis in recent years, marked by fiscal pressure, high debt levels and balance-of-payments difficulties. Officials now say that decreasing levels of inflation and higher foreign exchange reserves reflect the government’s prudent fiscal policies and debt management.

“The fiscal space created through consolidation and reforms is being directed toward priority growth-enabling sectors, including human capital development, agriculture, information technology, and other areas with strong growth potential,” Aurangzeb said, adding that rebuilding buffers, dampening pro-cyclicality, and sustaining growth require persistence, institutional reform and disciplined policymaking, particularly for countries facing repeated structural and climate-related shocks.