
Amir Muhammad Khan
The passage of Pakistan’s Budget 2026–27 has, as expected, been accompanied by a familiar mixture of political bargaining, coalition anxiety and rhetorical contestation. In the final stretch before approval, the federal capital briefly resembled less a site of fiscal decision-making and more a theatre of negotiated survival, where competing parties recalibrated their positions not so much on the basis of economic philosophy, but on political leverage and institutional survival. The tensions within the governing arrangement were visible in the positioning of key allies. The Muttahida Qaumi Movement–Pakistan (MQM-P), long a pivotal urban political force in Sindh, once again placed its support in conditional terms, linking its cooperation to demands over the reinstatement of the provincial governorship.
Meanwhile, the Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP), the dominant ruling party in Sindh, engaged in parallel negotiations over fiscal federalism, particularly the National Finance Commission (NFC) Award, while also raising concerns about its perceived marginalisation in other territories. In the language of Pakistan’s coalition politics, these were not unusual developments, but they underscored the transactional nature of governance in a system where consensus is rarely ideological and more often procedural. In the end, neither rupture nor dramatic breakdown occurred. MQM-P, like most coalition partners operating within Pakistan’s parliamentary arithmetic, found itself constrained by the realities of legislative dependence.
The PPP, similarly, remained embedded in the broader structure of governance despite periodic withdrawals of enthusiasm and strategic distancing. The ruling Pakistan Muslim League–Nawaz (PML-N), for its part, expended significant political capital attempting to hold together a fragile coalition architecture that requires continuous negotiation rather than stable alignment. The intervention of federal figures tasked with managing political friction has become a recurring feature of this system. Meetings, assurances and recalibrations are now part of the routine choreography of governance. In this instance, Interior Minister Mohsin Naqvi emerged once again as a key facilitator, a figure increasingly associated with behind-the-scenes mediation in moments of institutional strain.
Whether such interventions represent effective governance or merely the management of recurring dysfunction remains open to interpretation. What is clear, however, is that coalition stability in Pakistan is sustained less through policy coherence and more through continuous political brokerage. Yet while the political class debates conditions, concessions and adjustments, the budget itself remains largely distant from public comprehension. Official presentations are often dense with technical language, macroeconomic projections and fiscal ratios that rarely translate into meaningful public understanding. This is not unique to Pakistan, but in a country where economic vulnerability is widespread, the gap between statistical presentation and lived reality is particularly stark.
The opposition’s role in this context is predictable. It critiques, amplifies grievances and frames the budget as evidence of broader economic mismanagement. The government, conversely, seeks to present continuity, discipline and reform-oriented intent. But beneath this familiar exchange lies a more uncomfortable reality: most citizens experience the budget not as a document or policy framework, but as a series of price adjustments that materialise in markets, utility bills and transport costs. There is also a deeper structural issue that no annual budget can easily resolve. Pakistan’s fiscal system continues to rely heavily on borrowing, both external and domestic, to sustain its obligations. The recurring cycle of debt accumulation and repayment has created an economic environment in which each budget is partially pre-committed before it is even announced.
At the heart of Pakistan’s economic challenge lies a set of structural constraints that no single budget can resolve. The first is the narrowness of the tax base, which continues to place disproportionate burden on formal sectors while leaving large segments of the economy under-taxed or outside the net altogether. Without meaningful tax reform, fiscal sustainability will remain elusive. The second is export stagnation. While textiles remain central, the failure to diversify into higher-value sectors such as information technology, pharmaceuticals and advanced agriculture limits foreign exchange potential. There is considerable untapped capacity, particularly among Pakistan’s young digital workforce, yet policy support remains inconsistent.
Investment conditions also remain fragile. Investors, domestic and foreign, continue to prioritise predictability, legal certainty and policy continuity. Without these, even well-designed economic zones and industrial initiatives struggle to reach full potential. Agriculture, still the backbone of the economy, requires urgent modernisation. Productivity gains remain constrained by outdated irrigation practices, limited access to credit and weak integration of research into practice. Similarly, structural inefficiencies in governance, corruption and resource leakage continue to erode fiscal effectiveness.
(The writer is a senior US-based Pakistani journalist who writes on political and social issues and can be reached at editorial@metro-morning.com)



