Pakistan, China begin high-level talks to advance second phase of flagship Belt and Road project

Pakistan’s Planning Minister Ahsan Iqbal meets Vice-Chairman of China’s National Development and Reform Commission (NDRC), Zhou Haibing (right), at the 14th meeting of the Joint Coordination Committee (JCC) on the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC) in Beijing, China, on September 26, 2025. (X/@PlanComPakistan)
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Updated 26 September 2025
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Pakistan, China begin high-level talks to advance second phase of flagship Belt and Road project

  • CPEC Phase-II to focus on youth, innovation, agriculture and electric vehicles, says planning minister
  • Minister says Gwadar transformed into ‘maritime gateway’ as ML-1 upgrade set to revitalize railways

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan and China opened the 14th meeting of the Joint Coordination Committee (JCC) on the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC) in Beijing on Friday, Radio Pakistan said, with officials pledging to expand cooperation in the second phase of the multibillion-dollar infrastructure program.

CPEC, launched in 2015 as part of China’s Belt and Road Initiative, saw more than $25 billion invested in energy and transport projects during its first phase, including motorways, power plants and the Gwadar port. The second phase is expected to shift the focus to industrial cooperation, agriculture, technology and human capital development.

CPEC projects have stalled in recent years due to persistent security threats to Chinese workers and bureaucratic delays, and Islamabad is now seeking to revive momentum under the second phase.

“CPEC Phase-II will mark a new era of people and youth-focused development,” Pakistan’s Planning Minister Ahsan Iqbal was quoted by Radio Pakistan as saying, with projects such as PhD scholarships, innovation centers and internships in Chinese institutions.

According to Iqbal, Gwadar — a deep-sea port in southwest Pakistan built with Chinese funding — has already transformed from a small fishing town into a key maritime hub for Beijing’s Belt and Road trade routes, while the planned Main Line-1 (ML-1) railway upgradation — a multibillion-dollar project to modernize Pakistan’s colonial-era rail network from Karachi to Peshawar — is expected to overhaul the country’s transport system. 

He added that joint laboratories in artificial intelligence and quantum sciences, agricultural reform projects and electric vehicle initiatives would also be part of the new phase.

The minister noted that Pakistan wants its exports to have the same level of preferential access to Chinese markets as those from the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN), a regional bloc that already enjoys major trade concessions from Beijing. 

He said every corridor under Phase-II of the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor would be tied to specific export targets. Iqbal also pointed to a proposed “mining corridor” linking Chaghi — a mineral-rich district in Balochistan — to the Chinese-built port of Gwadar, which he said would open new avenues for investment. New border markets at Khunjerab Pass on the China border and Torkham on the Afghan frontier are also planned to boost regional trade, Ahsan added.

Iqbal stressed that Islamabad remained committed to securing CPEC projects and Chinese personnel working in Pakistan, describing the safety of investments as a government priority.


Islamabad dismisses claims about paying up to 8 percent interest on foreign loans as ‘misleading’

Updated 22 February 2026
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Islamabad dismisses claims about paying up to 8 percent interest on foreign loans as ‘misleading’

  • Pakistan has long relied on external loans to help bridge persistent gaps in public finances and foreign exchange reserves
  • Pakistan’s total external debt, liabilities stand at $138 billion at an overall average cost of around 4 percent, ministry says

KARACHI: Pakistan’s finance ministry on Sunday dismissed as “misleading” claims that the country is paying up to 8 percent interest on external loans, saying the overall average cost of external public debt is approximately 4 percent.

Pakistan has long relied on external loans to help bridge persistent gaps in public finances and foreign exchange reserves, driven largely by a narrow tax base, chronic trade deficits, rising debt-servicing costs and repeated balance-of-payments pressures.

Over the decades, successive governments have turned to multilateral and bilateral lenders, including the International Monetary Fund, the World Bank and the Asian Development Bank, to support budgetary needs and shore up foreign exchange reserves.

The finance ministry on Sunday issued a clarification in response to a “recent press commentary” regarding the country’s external debt position and associated interest payments, and said the figures required contextual explanation to ensure accurate understanding of Pakistan’s external debt profile.

“Pakistan’s total external debt and liabilities currently stand at $138 billion. This figure, however, encompasses a broad range of obligations, including public and publicly guaranteed debt, debt of Public Sector Enterprises (both guaranteed and non-guaranteed), bank borrowings, private-sector external debt, and intercompany liabilities to direct investors. It is therefore important to distinguish this aggregate figure from External Public (Government) Debt, which amounts to approximately $92 billion,” it said.

“Of the total External Public Debt, nearly 75 percent comprises concessional and long-term financing obtained from multilateral institutions (excluding the IMF) and bilateral development partners. Only about 7 percent of this debt consists of commercial loans, while another 7 percent relates to long-term Eurobonds. In light of this composition, the claim that Pakistan is paying interest on external loans ‘up to 8 percent’ is misleading.

The overall average cost of External Public Debt is approximately 4 percent, reflecting the predominantly concessional nature of the borrowing portfolio.”

With respect to interest payments, public external debt interest outflows increased from $1.99 billion in Fiscal Year (FY) 2022 to $3.59 billion in FY2025, representing an increase of 80.4 percent, not 84 percent as reported. In absolute terms, interest payments rose by $1.60 billion over this period, not $1.67 billion, it said.

According to the State Bank of Pakistan’s records, Pakistan’s total debt servicing payments to specific creditors during the period under reference were as follows: the IMF received $1.50 billion, of which $580 million constituted interest; Naya Pakistan Certificates payments totaled $1.56 billion, including $94 million in interest; the Asian Development Bank received $1.54 billion, including $615 million in interest; the World Bank received $1.25 billion, including $419 million in interest; and external commercial loans amounted to nearly $3 billion, of which $327 million represented interest payments.

“While interest payments have increased in absolute terms, this rise cannot be attributed solely to an expansion in the debt stock,” the ministry said. “Although the overall debt stock has increased slightly since FY2022, the additional inflows have primarily originated from concessional multilateral sources and the IMF’s Extended Fund Facility (EFF) under the ongoing IMF-supported program.”

Pakistan secured a $7 billion IMF bailout in Sept. 2024 as part of Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif’s efforts to stabilize the South Asian economy that narrowly averted a default in 2023. The government has since been making efforts to boost trade and bring in foreign investment to consolidate recovery.

“It is also important to note that the increase in interest payments reflects prevailing global interest rate dynamics. In response to the inflation surge of 2021–22, the US Federal Reserve raised the federal funds rate from 0.75-1.00 percent in May 2022 to 5.25–5.50 percent by July 2023. Although rates have since moderated to around 3.75 percent, they remain significantly higher than 2022 levels,” the finance ministry said.

“The government remains committed to prudent debt management, transparency, and the continued strengthening of Pakistan’s macroeconomic stability,” it added.