IMF team visits Pakistan for $7 billion bailout program review

An exterior view of the building of the International Monetary Fund (IMF), with the IMG logo, is seen on March 27, 2020 in Washington, DC. (AFP/File)
Short Url
Updated 03 March 2025
Follow

IMF team visits Pakistan for $7 billion bailout program review

  • Islamabad secured $7 billion Extended Fund Facility last summer as part of economic recovery plan
  • Local media widely reports IMF demanding action against tax evasion in Pakistan’s real estate sector

ISLAMABAD: A mission from the International Monetary Fund (IMF) arrived in Islamabad today, Monday, for the first review of a $7 billion bailout program, according to a Pakistani official and widespread reports in local media.

Islamabad secured the $7 billion Extended Fund Facility (EFF) last summer as part of an economic recovery plan. 

Pakistan’s economy had stabilized and now needed to focus on export-led growth, the finance minister said last week as he confirmed the IMF delegation’s visit from March 3-14.

Pakistan’s consumer price index (CPI) inflation rate, maintaining a downward trend on Monday, hit a more than 9-year low at 1.51 percent year-on-year in February.

A Pakistani economic adviser told Arab News, requesting anonymity, that a nine-member mission led by Nathan Porter had landed in Pakistan to assess the country’s economic performance to determine the release of a $1.1 billion tranche over the following three weeks.

Top Pakistani news channel, ARY News, reported that the IMF was demanding action against tax evasion in Pakistan’s real estate sector.

“During the talks, the IMF pushed for action against those misdeclaring property values,” ARY reported, saying the government had assured the international lender it would activate the Real Estate Regulatory Authority.

“Strict penalties, including imprisonment and fines, will be imposed on individuals and agents who falsely declare property values … As per sources, failing to register could result in a fine of up to Rs500,000,” ARY added. 

The Real Estate Regulatory Authority could be granted the power to impose up to three years of imprisonment and revoke the licenses of agents and fine them for providing false information:

“Misdeclaration in property transfers could lead to fines ranging from Rs500,000 to Rs 1 million,” ARY said. 

Pakistan’s Dawn newspaper said the government “remains optimistic about a successful conclusion to the talks.”

“The performance review, in principle, is based on the first half of the current fiscal year — July 1 to Dec 31, 2024 — and while some shortcomings could be observed at that time, all those missing links have now been covered,” Dawn reported, quoting a Pakistani official.

The IMF team usually spends around two weeks reviewing fiscal reforms and policy.

Last week, a separate IMF team visited Pakistan to discuss around $1 billion in climate financing on top of the EFF. That disbursement will take place under the IMF’s Resilience and Sustainability Trust, created in 2022 to provide long-term concessional cash for climate-related spending, such as adaptation and transitioning to cleaner energy.


Three security personnel, five militants killed in separate incidents in Pakistan’s northwest

Updated 6 sec ago
Follow

Three security personnel, five militants killed in separate incidents in Pakistan’s northwest

  • An army major and five militants were killed in an operation in Bajaur, while gunmen shot dead two cops in Lakki Marwat and Tank
  • Pakistan has blamed the surge in militancy in its northwest on Afghanistan and India-backed militants, Kabul and New Delhi deny this

PESHAWAR: Three security personnel, including an army major, and five militants were killed in separate incidents in Pakistan’s northwestern Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP) province, police and military said on Monday, amid a surge in militancy in the province bordering Afghanistan.

Security forces conducted an operation in KP’s Bajaur district on reported presence of Pakistani Taliban militants, according to the Inter-Services Public Relations (ISPR), the military’s media wing.

Five “Indian-sponsored” militants were killed during the operation, while it also resulted in the killing of Major Adeel Zaman who was leading his troops from the front.

“Weapons and ammunition were also recovered from the killed khwarij [militants], who remained actively involved in numerous terrorist activities,” the ISPR said in a statement.

“Sanitization operations are being conducted to eliminate any other Indian sponsored kharja [militant] found in the area.”

Separately, gunmen abducted Sajjad Hussain, a police constable who was traveling home on leave, in KP’s Tank district and later shot him dead, according to district police spokesman Younus Khan.

“The martyred constable, Sajjad Hussain, was posted at the Nasran checkpoint,” Khan told Arab News. “He was intercepted, forced off his vehicle, and shot on Shah Alam–Nasran Road by militants.”

Another policeman, Assistant Sub-Inspector Mumtaz Ali, was shot dead by gunmen in Pezu area of the nearby Lakki Marwat district.

“The officer, who was posted in Tank, was on his way to his duty station when assailants intercepted his vehicle, forced him out, and opened fire, killing him on the spot,” Khan added.

No group immediately claimed responsibility for the police killings, which came a day after police killed eight militants in KP’s Karak district.

Pakistan has struggled to contain a surge in militancy in KP in recent years. Militant groups such as the Pakistani Taliban, or the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), have frequently targeted convoys of security forces, police stations and check-posts besides kidnapping government officials in the region.

Islamabad has frequently accused Afghanistan of allowing its soil and India of backing militant groups, including the TTP, for attacks against Pakistan. Kabul and New Delhi have consistently denied this.