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    Home » Economic reform or rhetoric?
    OPINION

    Economic reform or rhetoric?

    adminBy adminJanuary 5, 2026Updated:January 5, 2026No Comments6 Views
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    By S.M. Inam

    Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif has painted a picture of economic revival that is both confident and aspirational. Addressing a federal cabinet meeting, he claimed that his government had guided Pakistan away from the brink of default, setting the country on a trajectory toward stability and growth. Central to this narrative was the transparent privatization of 75 per cent of Pakistan International Airlines, framed as a landmark achievement and a cornerstone of broader reform efforts. The government points to GDP growth and other macroeconomic indicators as evidence that the economy is recovering, suggesting that Pakistan is poised for take-off after years of fiscal turbulence.

    On the surface, this story is compelling. It promises a Pakistan liberated from the constraints of chronic deficits, underperforming institutions, and investor uncertainty. Privatization, investment, and reform are presented as the instruments that will usher in a new era of prosperity. Yet beneath these proclamations lies a more complicated reality, one in which ordinary citizens feel little of the optimism projected from Islamabad’s corridors of power. Official data from the Pakistan Bureau of Statistics offers a sobering counterpoint: in December 2025, the trade deficit widened by nearly 24 per cent compared with the same month the previous year, rising from $2.99 billion to $3.7 billion. At the same time, inflation continues to exert pressure on households, and utility bills weigh heavily on both finances and morale. Modest reductions in petroleum prices have done little to mitigate the broader cost-of-living pressures, leaving many questioning whether macroeconomic “stability” has truly been achieved.

    Privatization is presented as an inevitable remedy for the historic underperformance of state enterprises. Pakistan International Airlines, a long-standing symbol of inefficiency and fiscal burden, is now being handed over to private management in hopes that market discipline will drive efficiency. Yet transferring public assets into private hands is not the only path to reform. Accountability, transparency, and governance reforms within state institutions can achieve many of the same objectives without eroding national assets. Without these safeguards, privatization risks becoming a short-term fix that sacrifices public value for immediate fiscal optics, with no guarantee that benefits will reach ordinary citizens.

    Pakistan’s economic challenge is therefore multi-dimensional. Success cannot be measured solely by GDP growth, trade figures, or cabinet announcements. Economic stability must be experienced in tangible ways: in households that can afford essentials without anxiety, in farmers and small businesses able to plan and invest with confidence, and in citizens who sense that the economy is responsive to their everyday needs. Without these outcomes, statistics remain abstract, and policy announcements risk becoming exercises in rhetoric rather than instruments of meaningful reform.

    The widening trade deficit and persistent inflation illustrate deeper structural weaknesses that cannot be remedied by announcements alone. Reliance on privatization and high-profile deals may offer short-term relief or symbolic wins, but they do little to address the underlying vulnerabilities of an economy dependent on imports, vulnerable to commodity shocks, and burdened by inefficiencies in energy, transport, and governance. Structural reforms—ranging from better fiscal management to more resilient supply chains—are essential if Pakistan is to translate macroeconomic signals into real improvements for its people.

    Privatization can, of course, form an effective part of broader reform if accompanied by careful oversight, regulatory safeguards, and mechanisms to ensure equitable distribution of benefits. The challenge for the government is to modernize institutions while maintaining national control, protecting employment, and ensuring that strategic assets are not simply transferred to profit-seeking hands at the expense of long-term national interest. Without this balance, high-profile deals risk being celebrated in boardrooms while households continue to struggle with rising prices and economic uncertainty.

    Ultimately, Pakistan’s economic future hinges not on the pace of privatization or the confidence of cabinet statements, but on whether the policies of today yield tangible improvements for the majority. True economic stability is measured in the confidence of households, the resilience of small businesses, and the effectiveness of institutions that underpin daily life. Citizens must perceive the impact of reform in their daily lives for government claims of progress to gain credibility.

    In conclusion, the narrative of Pakistan’s economic revival is promising, yet the gap between rhetoric and lived reality remains wide. Privatization, GDP growth, and high-profile deals may signal progress in theory, but citizens measure stability through tangible improvements in their daily lives. For reform to be credible and sustainable, it must combine macroeconomic rigor with microeconomic impact, efficiency with equity, and institutional modernization with the protection of national assets. Only then can Pakistan transform aspirational economic rhetoric into a concrete and inclusive reality for its people, ensuring that prosperity is both shared and enduring.

    (The writer is a former government officer and a senior analyst on national and international affairs, can be reached at inam@metro-morning.com)

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