Pakistan central bank chief expects broader recovery than IMF forecast

State Bank of Pakistan Governor Jameel Ahmad speaks at the Reuters NEXT Asia summit in Singapore July 9, 2025. (REUTERS)
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Updated 11 February 2026
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Pakistan central bank chief expects broader recovery than IMF forecast

  • State Bank chief says recovery is broad-based across agriculture, industry and services despite IMF downgrade
  • Strong remittances, dollar purchases seen cushioning trade gap, keeping current account deficit within 1 percent of GDP

KARACHI: Pakistan’s central bank chief expects the economy ​to grow as much as 4.75 percent this fiscal year, pushing back against a recent downgrade by the International Monetary Fund.

Governor Jameel Ahmad, in written responses to Reuters, argued the recovery is broader and more durable than headline export data suggest.

The State Bank of Pakistan (SBP) raised its FY26 growth forecast to 3.75–4.75 percent at its January meeting, 0.5 percentage point higher than its previous range, despite a contraction in exports in the first half of the year and a widening trade deficit.

The governor said differences in ‌projections were not unusual ‌and reflected timing issues, including the IMF’s incorporation of ​flood-related ‌assessments ⁠in its ​latest outlook.

“All ⁠these sources and indicators, along with FY26-Q1 data, point to a broad-based recovery in all three sectors of the economy,” he said. He added that the central bank believed that agricultural activity had remained resilient despite floods and “it is even performing better than its targets.”

He added that financial conditions had eased significantly following a cumulative 1,150-basis-point cut in the policy rate since June 2024, and that the full impact was still feeding through. ⁠This, he said, was supporting growth while preserving price and economic ‌stability.

The central bank last month held its ‌benchmark rate at 10.5 percent, defying expectations for a cut.

The divergence ​with the IMF comes at a ‌delicate moment for Pakistan, which is emerging from a balance-of-payments crisis under a $7 billion ‌IMF program.

EXPORT DRAG, REMITTANCE CUSHION

Pakistan’s previous growth spurts have often led to currency pressure and a decline in foreign exchange reserves, making the sustainability of the current rebound a key question for investors.

Ahmad said high-frequency indicators and 6 percent growth in large-scale manufacturing in July–November point to strengthening demand, ‌while agriculture has remained resilient despite last year’s floods, he said.

While exports declined in the first half of the fiscal ⁠year, Ahmad said the ⁠fall reflected low global prices and border disruptions rather than softer activity.

He said the current account deficit should stay within 0–1 percent of GDP, as strong remittances offset the wider trade gap and lift reserves above program targets, with further gains expected due to Eid festival-related inflows.

“Additionally, if the government decided to tap global capital markets for any debt issuance, then that would be on the upside of our current assessment,” he said.

Pakistan plans to issue panda bonds, a yuan-denominated debt sold in China’s domestic market around the upcoming Lunar New Year, as part of efforts to diversify external financing and broaden its investor base.

He said the central bank has been consistently purchasing dollars ​in the interbank market to ​strengthen foreign exchange buffers, with data published regularly.

He said that while economic stability has improved, structural reforms remain key to sustaining stronger growth and improving productivity.


Pakistan PM seeks review of new solar rules, orders protection of existing contracts

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Pakistan PM seeks review of new solar rules, orders protection of existing contracts

  • Shehbaz Sharif directs appeal to NEPRA to safeguard contracts of 466,000 rooftop solar users
  • He asks the government to ensure the cost does not shift to 37.6 million grid-only consumers

ISLAMABAD: Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif on Wednesday ordered a review of new rooftop solar regulations issued by the power regulator, directing authorities to protect existing consumer contracts while ensuring the policy does not shift financial burden onto non-solar electricity users.

The move follows recent changes by the National Electric Power Regulatory Authority (NEPRA) that altered compensation rules for surplus electricity generated by rooftop solar users, part of broader power sector reforms aimed at easing pressure on state-run utilities.

Pakistan has been restructuring its energy sector under an International Monetary Fund-backed reform program to contain mounting circular debt and rationalize subsidies. Rapid growth in rooftop solar installations has reduced grid demand but also strained distribution companies’ revenues, prompting regulatory adjustments.

“The Power Division should immediately file a review petition before NEPRA to ensure maximum protection of existing contracts of solar consumers,” the prime minister instructed, according to a statement issued by his office.

He further instructed authorities to formulate a comprehensive plan to ensure that the cost burden of 466,000 solar beneficiaries does not fall on more than 37.6 million consumers who rely solely on the national grid.

Solar power grew from 4 percent of the energy mix in 2021 to over 14 percent–25 percent in 2024-2025, official figures show.

Driven by skyrocketing grid tariffs, Pakistan became one of the world’s top new solar adopters, importing roughly 22 gigawatts (GW) of solar panels in 2024 alone.

Industry data shows tens of thousands of new solar connections have been added annually, significantly reducing demand from the grid during daylight hours.

However, NEPRA’s new compensation rules have been designed so that consumers continue to pay full tariffs for electricity drawn from the grid while receiving a lower, market-linked rate for excess power they export.