IMF, Pakistan kick off discussions as lender reviews $8.4 billion loan programs 

Pakistan's finance minister Muhammad Aurangzeb (fourth in left row) holds meeting with the visiting IMF delegation in Islamabad, Pakistan, on September 29, 2025. (IMF)
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Updated 29 September 2025
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IMF, Pakistan kick off discussions as lender reviews $8.4 billion loan programs 

  • IMF mission arrived in Pakistan last week to hold separate reviews of $7 billion and $1.4 billion loan programs 
  • Discussions take place as Pakistan eyes concessions in program targets from IMF following devastating floods 

KARACHI: A visiting International Monetary Fund (IMF) mission kicked off talks with Pakistani officials on Monday as it holds the second review of its $7 billion External Fund Facility (EFF) and first review of the $1.4 billion Resilience and Sustainability Facility (RSF) loan programs for the country, the lender confirmed. 

The IMF mission arrived in Pakistan on Sept. 25 to conduct the reviews. The global lender approved a $7 billion bailout package for Pakistan under its EFF program in September 2024 while in May, it approved a separate $1.4 billion loan for Pakistan as a climate resilience fund. The RSF will support Pakistan’s efforts in building economic resilience to climate vulnerabilities and natural disasters. 

“Federal Minister for Finance and Revenue, Senator Muhammad Aurangzeb, chairing the kick-off meeting with the visiting IMF Review Mission at the Finance Division today,” the IMF said in a statement, sharing pictures of the meeting between the two sides. 

The discussion takes place as Pakistan seeks concessions in its program targets following devastating floods that killed over 130 in its eastern Punjab province since late August, impacted over 4.5 million people and destroyed large swathes of crops. The devastation has spiked food prices in many parts of the country, with experts warning of food shortages due to supply chain disruptions. 

Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif met the fund’s Managing Director Kristalina Georgieva in New York last week on the sidelines of the ongoing United Nations’ General Assembly session. During the meeting, Sharif spoke about Pakistan’s progress in fulfilling the IMF program targets but also demanded that the impact of recent floods on Pakistan’s economy “must be factored into the IMF’s review,“

Islamabad has so far received more than $2 billion under the EFF and is expecting a third tranche of $1 billion after the second review concludes successfully.

IMF’s bailout packages have proven instrumental in keeping Pakistan’s fragile $350 billion economy afloat, as the country grapples with tough economic conditions that have triggered a balance of payments crisis and weakened its national currency. 

Pakistan has undertaken painful measures in the past, such as removing subsidies that have resulted in higher food and fuel prices, spiking inflation in the country. Pakistani financial experts told Arab News last week they expected the global lender to grant Islamabad concessions as far as its program targets were concerned, in light of the damages inflicted by the recent floods. 

 “We are expecting Pakistan to get a little breather due to the floods,” economist Sana Tawfik said last week, adding that Islamabad would comfortably meet the international lender’s targets. 

Shankar Talreja, head of research at brokerage firm Topline Securities Ltd., said the current review will focus on continuing the IMF’s reforms under revised parameters due to the floods. He said the government is expected to keep pushing for privatization of state-owned enterprises and clearing its old backlog of circular debt.
 
“The concessions are likely in form of some downward revisions in FBR (Federal Board of Revenue) tax revenue, upward revision in fiscal balance over relief spending and there might a downward adjustment in GDP growth target as well,” Talreja said. 


Pakistan Navy escorting ships on country’s own trade routes, not Strait of Hormuz— official

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Pakistan Navy escorting ships on country’s own trade routes, not Strait of Hormuz— official

  • Pakistan’s military announced this week that navy ships were escorting merchant vessels mid tensions in Strait of Hormuz
  • Navy operation limited to merchant vessels traveling on the Karachi–Gulf and Karachi–Red Sea trade routes, clarifies official

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s navy is escorting merchant vessels along its own maritime routes and not on the Strait of Hormuz, a security official confirmed on Wednesday, amid a global energy crisis triggered by the key passageway’s closure. 

Pakistani military’s media wing announced on Monday it had launched ‘Operation Muhafiz-ul-Bahr’ in which the country’s navy ships were escorting merchant vessels “to ensure the uninterrupted flow of national energy supplies and the security of sea lines of communication.”

The Strait of Hormuz is the narrow mouth of the Arabian Gulf through which about a fifth of the world’s oil passes. The US-Israeli war against Iran has halted tanker traffic on the key route. Iran has attacked several ships in the Strait of Hormuz and threatened any ships that try to pass through it. 

A Pakistani security official stressed that the navy’s Operation Muhafiz-ul-Bahr is focused only on Pakistan’s own sea lines of communication, particularly the routes linking Karachi with the Gulf region and the Red Sea.

“Pakistan Navy is conducting escort operations for Pakistani vessels operating along the Karachi–Gulf and Karachi–Red Sea Sea Lines of Communication (SLOCs),” the official told Arab News on condition of anonymity as he was not authorized to speak to media .

“These operations should not be misconstrued as escorting ships transiting through the Strait of Hormuz.”

The military announced on Monday that the navy is conducting the operation to escort merchant vessels in close coordination with the Pakistan National Shipping Corporation (PNSC).

“With approximately 90 percent of Pakistan’s trade conducted via sea, the operation aims to ensure that vital sea routes remain safe, secure, and uninterrupted,” the military’s media wing said in its earlier statement. 

Officials say the operation is intended to protect Pakistan’s commercial shipping and energy supplies while maintaining safe passage on critical maritime routes linking the country to global markets.

Pakistan has been hit hard by the closure of the Strait of Hormuz, with the government forced to hike the price of petrol and diesel by Rs55 per liter on Friday. 

Pakistan imports most of its fuel from the Gulf region. The sharp rise in global oil prices has forced Islamabad to evaluate its fuel stocks and take tough measures to conserve petroleum products as the Gulf war intensifies.