
By Uzma Ehtasham
A meeting chaired by Shehbaz Sharif has produced a policy response that will be familiar to many Pakistanis, even if it remains contentious: the early closure of markets across most of the country. Announced as a measure of energy conservation and fiscal prudence, the decision requires bazaars, shopping centers, and department stores to close by 8pm, while restaurants, bakeries, and wedding venues must end operations by 10pm. The restrictions, already in effect since 7 April, cover all provinces and territories except Sindh, where consultations are still underway. On the surface, the logic of the policy is clear. Pakistan has faced recurring energy shortages for decades, and the rising cost of imported fuel has left policymakers with little room for maneuver.
Closing commercial activity in the late evening is framed as a pragmatic attempt to reduce electricity consumption without resorting to direct rationing. Yet, as with many such interventions, the policy raises as many questions as it seeks to answer. Economic concerns are immediate and unavoidable. Retailers, already grappling with inflation and weak consumer demand, fear that shorter trading hours will cut footfall during the peak evening period, particularly in urban centers where life traditionally stretches late into the night. These anxieties are understandable. Evening hours have long been a crucial window for commerce, providing space for working households to shop and for leisure activities to sustain economic circulation. Yet the policy does not reduce the total number of permissible working hours.
It simply rearranges them. Markets that once opened at noon and closed at midnight can, in principle, shift to an earlier schedule without necessarily losing business volume. How businesses adapt will determine whether the feared contraction materializes. The measure also tests the public’s ability to adjust. Shopping patterns, family routines, and even social interactions are all shaped by established schedules. Changing them overnight is rarely seamless. Success, therefore, will depend as much on social compliance as on administrative enforcement. If consumers move their activity earlier in the day, the economic disruption may be far less severe than predicted. In this sense, the policy becomes a broader experiment in coordination: between government, business, and citizens. Sindh’s decision to hold off introduces another layer of complexity.
Provincial autonomy allows for such divergence, but the lack of a unified national approach risks diluting the overall impact. Energy conservation, by its nature, demands coherence. Businesses that operate across provincial borders may face uncertainty and inconsistency, complicating compliance. Yet Sindh’s hesitation may also reflect an effort to adopt a more tailored approach, one that considers local circumstances and avoids imposing rigid measures that could disrupt livelihoods unnecessarily. If successful, this calibrated approach could serve as a model for the federation at large. The political economy behind the decision is also revealing. Governments rarely impose such measures by choice; they act under compulsion, responding to structural pressures that leave few alternatives. In this case, the burden is shared—albeit unevenly—between the state and the private sector.
The exemption granted to pharmacies and medical stores highlights the selective nature of the intervention, ensuring that essential services remain uninterrupted while other sectors absorb the cost. It is a delicate balance between necessity and fairness, between collective responsibility and individual hardship. At its core, the policy is an attempt to manage scarcity rather than resolve it. It addresses the immediate problem of electricity demand without tackling the underlying structural issues: inadequate energy production, inefficient distribution, and heavy reliance on imports. Whether it will succeed in reducing consumption without crippling commerce depends on a careful balance of enforcement and flexibility, on businesses’ ability to adapt, and on citizens’ willingness to modify long-standing habits. Ultimately, these early closures are a symptom of a larger challenge.
Pakistan’s energy crisis is chronic, rooted in decades of underinvestment, planning gaps, and political inertia. Short-term measures such as trading hour restrictions may provide temporary relief, but they cannot substitute for long-term reform. A sustainable energy strategy requires investment in generation capacity, improvements in transmission efficiency, and policies that encourage conservation without unduly burdening households or businesses. For now, the government has acted decisively to impose order on a situation that has grown increasingly difficult. The measures are imperfect, and the disruption they cause is unavoidable. Yet they are a reminder of the limits policymakers face when structural constraints intersect with daily life. If the public, businesses, and provincial authorities can navigate this period with adaptability and patience, the policy may achieve modest relief.
If not, it risks becoming another episode in a cycle of crisis management—an interim measure that temporarily masks, rather than resolves, Pakistan’s enduring energy challenges. Can temporary measures become part of a broader vision that addresses supply deficits, strengthens regulatory frameworks, and promotes long-term sustainability? Or will they remain a recurring feature of Pakistan’s energy landscape, applied whenever shortages threaten economic stability, only to be lifted once the immediate crisis subsides? For the public, businesses, and policymakers alike, the current measures offer a moment for reflection. They also demonstrate that policy, no matter how well-intentioned, requires cooperation and adaptation to succeed. Whether the early closure of markets becomes a model of pragmatic governance or a short-lived stopgap will depend on decisions made not only in government offices but also in the rhythms of markets, streets, and homes across Pakistan.
(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)


