Monday, 8 December 2025

Pakistan Plunging Deeper into Debt Trap

If 2025 has revealed anything, it is the alarming disconnect between Pakistan’s economic reality and the self-congratulatory narratives pushed by its policymakers.

The year has passed without a single meaningful breakthrough—no new productive units, no serious investment in balancing, modernization or replacement (BMR), and no expansion in industrial capacity. The economy is drifting, yet those responsible for steering it remain disturbingly complacent.

The import bill tells a story of its own. A 15 percent surge in imports exposes how deeply dependent the country has become on everything from basic raw materials to high-end consumer goods. Simultaneously, a 5 percent decline in exports reflects both declining competitiveness and an industrial sector gasping for breath. This is not a temporary imbalance; it is a structural failure in the making, now accelerating under an administration that mistakes cosmetic measures for policy.

Instead of responding with urgency, Pakistan’s economic managers have taken refuge in denial. They continue celebrating short-term dollar inflows as if these lifelines represent real progress. Their strategy—if it can be called one—rests entirely on IMF bailouts, emergency loans from friendly countries, and repeated rollovers of past obligations. This is not economic management; it is firefighting with borrowed water.

Worst of all, there is no sign of strategic thinking. No national plan for industrial revival, no push for technological upgrading, no attempt to diversify exports, and no investment in productivity. The economy is being held together by ad hoc decisions, political gimmicks, and a misplaced belief that stabilization alone can substitute for growth.

Pakistan is not suffering from a lack of options; it is suffering from a lack of seriousness. Nations facing crises reform their energy sectors, modernize their agriculture, incentivize manufacturing, and push for export-oriented growth. Pakistan, by contrast, has spent 2025 celebrating marginal improvements while ignoring the collapse taking place beneath the surface.

With rising imports, shrinking exports, stagnant industries and policymakers lost in complacency, the direction is painfully clear, Pakistan economy is plunging deeper into debt trap.

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