Reform program implementation in focus as Pakistan PM meets IMF MD at Davos

Prime Minister of Pakistan, Shehbaz Sharif (center) shaking hands with IMF Managing Director Kristalina Georgieva (right) during their meeting on the sidelines of the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, in a pictures shared by the Prime Minister Office on January 22, 2026. (PMO/X)
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Updated 22 January 2026
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Reform program implementation in focus as Pakistan PM meets IMF MD at Davos

  • IMF chief says “strong program implementation” is anchoring stability, rebuilding confidence
  • Islamabad says reforms aimed at fiscal discipline, revenue mobilization, sustainable growth

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s implementation of an International Monetary Fund reform program was in focus this week as Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif met IMF Managing Director Kristalina Georgieva on the sidelines of the World Economic Forum in Davos, as Islamabad seeks to consolidate macroeconomic stability and transition toward durable growth.

Pakistan is operating under a $7 billion IMF stabilization program approved in September 2024, which underpins its efforts to rein in fiscal deficits, stabilize external accounts, curb inflation and restore investor confidence after repeated balance-of-payments crises. The program is widely seen as a key anchor for economic policy and external financing.

The Davos meeting comes as Pakistan’s government says it has moved from emergency stabilization toward structural reform, while remaining under close IMF monitoring. Authorities argue that adherence to program benchmarks is essential to avoiding a return to boom-and-bust cycles and maintaining access to multilateral and market financing.

“Very productive meeting with Pakistan PM,” Georgieva wrote on X. “Strong program implementation is anchoring stability and rebuilding confidence, with reforms laying the foundations for durable growth to lift living standards.”

Separately on Thursday, Sharif wrote on X that he had briefed the IMF chief on Pakistan’s reform trajectory and macroeconomic position.

“Pakistan’s improving macroeconomic indicators, stabilization efforts, and progress on structural reforms,” were discussed, he said, noting that both sides “reaffirmed Pakistan’s strong commitment to fiscal discipline, revenue mobilization, and sustainable growth.”

Pakistan remains one of the IMF’s largest program countries, with officials stressing that continued compliance with reform conditions is central to safeguarding economic stability, strengthening external accounts and sustaining growth in a challenging global environment.

Pakistan’s government says macroeconomic conditions have improved over the past year under the IMF program. The consumer price inflation slowed to 5.6% year-on-year in December, while prices fell on a monthly basis, official data showed this month. Inflation eased from 6.1% in November and marked a sharp slowdown from levels that peaked above 30% in 2023, according to data.

Pakistan’s central bank cut its key policy rate by 50 basis points to 10.5% last month, breaking a four-meeting hold, in a move that surprised markets.

The State Bank of Pakistan has said inflation stayed within its 5%–7% target range during the July–November period but warned that core inflation remains sticky and headline inflation could rise temporarily toward the end of this fiscal year, which ends in June, due to base effects.

Officials say foreign exchange reserves have stabilized, the current account deficit has narrowed, and exports and remittances have shown gradual recovery, allowing policymakers to shift focus from crisis management toward sustaining growth while remaining aligned with IMF reform benchmarks.


Pakistan urges Hajj pilgrims to complete Saudi biometrics till Sunday

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Pakistan urges Hajj pilgrims to complete Saudi biometrics till Sunday

  • Saudi Arabia has allocated Pakistan a quota of 179,210 pilgrims for this year’s Hajj
  • Saudi biometric verification is mandatory for issuance of Hajj visas, ministry says

ISLAMABAD: The Pakistani religious affairs ministry has urged aspiring Hajj pilgrims to complete mandatory Saudi biometric verification for Hajj visas by Sunday, Pakistani state media reported, with preparations for the 2026 pilgrimage gathering pace following stricter oversight of the Hajj process.

Saudi Arabia has allocated Pakistan a quota of 179,210 pilgrims for Hajj 2026, with the majority of seats reserved under the government scheme and the remainder allocated to private tour operators.

Regulations for private Hajj operators have been tightened and their quota reduced following widespread complaints last year, when tens of thousands of pilgrims were unable to travel under the private Hajj scheme.

The Pakistani religious affairs ministry said last month that Saudi biometric verification is mandatory for the issuance of Hajj visas and pilgrims should complete it at home using the ‘Saudi Visa Bio’ app.

“Hajj visas will not be issued without biometrics, however pilgrims over 80 years of age are exempted from biometrics,” the Radio Pakistan broadcaster reported, citing the religious affairs ministry.

Pakistan has been steadily implementing digital and procedural requirements for pilgrims ahead of Hajj 2026, including mandatory training sessions, biometric checks and greater use of mobile applications, as part of efforts to reduce mismanagement.

Pilgrims who were unable to complete biometric verification through the mobile application should visit designated Saudi Tasheer centers before Feb. 8, according to the religious affairs ministry.

Details of the centers are available on Pakistan’s official Hajj mobile application. Tasheer centers will remain open from 9am to 5pm today and on Sunday to facilitate Hajj pilgrims, it added.