
By Uzma Ehtasham
The meeting of the National Economic Council, chaired by Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif, has set the framework for Pakistan’s fiscal direction in the coming year, offering a familiar blend of ambition, constraint and careful arithmetic. At its centre lies a decision that appears, at first glance, to preserve continuity: the federal development budget remains fixed at Rs1,000 billion. Yet beneath that stability sits a sharper recalibration of priorities, most visibly in the provinces, where development spending has been cut by Rs920 billion, reducing the combined provincial allocation to Rs3,669 billion.
On paper, the approach signals discipline. In practice, it also exposes the tightening boundaries within which economic policymaking in Pakistan now operates. The federal government has held its own development envelope steady, but the adjustment has been absorbed elsewhere, most notably in Punjab, where allocations have fallen dramatically from Rs1,450 billion to Rs749 billion. Sindh and Khyber Pakhtunkhwa have also seen reductions, while Balochistan’s allocation has been left unchanged at Rs308 billion. The pattern will inevitably invite scrutiny, not only on economic grounds but on questions of federal balance and political equity.
Officials describe the shift as a rationalisation of priorities, a necessary alignment of spending with fiscal reality. Yet it also reflects a deeper constraint: Pakistan’s development choices are increasingly being shaped less by long-term planning ambitions and more by immediate fiscal ceilings, external financing requirements and the structural weight of existing obligations. Within that space, development spending becomes less a driver of transformation and more a variable adjusted to preserve macroeconomic stability.
The government’s simultaneous target of 4 per cent GDP growth reinforces the tension between aspiration and constraint. Growth remains the central political and economic narrative, a benchmark against which progress is measured and communicated. But the gap between targets and outcomes has become a familiar feature of Pakistan’s economic cycle. Even in years where performance approaches expectations, the underlying structure of the economy remains largely unchanged: narrow export capacity, limited productivity gains, persistent inflationary pressure and dependence on external financing streams that shape domestic policy choices.
Recent figures indicating growth of 3.7 per cent, alongside a rise in per capita income to $1,901, offer a cautiously optimistic reading. Yet such indicators sit uneasily beside the lived experience of households facing high living costs, constrained wage growth and uneven access to public services. The contradiction is not unusual in developing economies, but in Pakistan it has become particularly pronounced, with macroeconomic stabilisation frequently failing to translate into visible improvements in everyday economic security.
The government’s continued engagement with the International Monetary Fund programme underscores this dynamic. Officials present it as a framework of discipline and reform, a necessary anchor for stabilisation. But it also reflects the limited fiscal space available for independent policy manoeuvre. Within this environment, economic planning is often conducted within pre-set parameters, where policy flexibility is exchanged for external support and short-term stability is prioritised over structural overhaul.
This constraint is especially visible in the composition of public spending. Defence requirements and counter-terrorism allocations remain significant, reflecting genuine security challenges faced by the state. At the same time, debt servicing continues to absorb a large share of available resources, leaving less room for development expenditure. The result is a budgetary structure in which discretionary spending is repeatedly squeezed, and development priorities are adjusted to accommodate obligations accumulated over decades.
It is in this context that the provincial cuts acquire broader significance. Development spending is not merely an accounting category; it is the primary channel through which infrastructure, public services and regional investment are delivered. Reductions of this scale inevitably raise questions about regional disparities and the long-term implications for balanced development across the federation. While fiscal consolidation may be necessary, the distribution of its costs remains politically and economically sensitive.
Underlying these technical decisions is a more persistent concern: the growing distance between economic narrative and economic experience. Official statements tend to emphasise resilience, recovery and incremental improvement, often framed in the language of external shocks and stabilisation efforts. Yet public perception is shaped less by macro indicators and more by the pressures of daily life—food inflation, transport costs, employment uncertainty and the perceived stagnation of opportunity.
This gap has become one of the defining features of Pakistan’s economic debate. Critics argue that policy discourse remains concentrated within a narrow technocratic space, where statistical improvements are highlighted while structural weaknesses receive less attention. Supporters of the current approach counter that stabilisation is a prerequisite for any meaningful transformation, and that without fiscal discipline, the risks of macroeconomic instability would be far greater.
Both perspectives contain elements of truth. Yet the unresolved question is whether stabilisation, as currently pursued, is sufficient to alter the underlying trajectory of the economy. Repeated cycles of external assistance, partial reform and modest growth have not yet produced a durable shift towards self-sustaining development. Instead, they have reinforced a pattern in which short-term stability coexists with long-term fragility.
As Pakistan enters a new fiscal cycle, the challenge is not simply to meet numerical targets or maintain fiscal balance. It is to confront the structural constraints that continue to limit economic transformation. Without addressing issues of productivity, export diversification, revenue mobilisation and institutional efficiency, budgetary adjustments risk remaining cyclical rather than transformative.
In that sense, the decisions of the National Economic Council represent more than a routine fiscal exercise. They reflect the enduring tension at the heart of Pakistan’s economic model: between stability and growth, between central authority and provincial equity, and between macroeconomic narratives and lived economic realities. Until that tension is resolved, economic planning will continue to operate within a narrow corridor of constrained choices, where ambition is repeatedly shaped—and limited—by necessity.
(The writer is a public health professional, journalist, and possesses expertise in health communication, having keen interest in national and international affairs, can be reached at uzma@metro-morning.com)



