News

A directionless agriculture sector

Has Pakistan’s agriculture sector — particularly its two major crops, wheat and cotton — attained a level of crop yields that allows it to compete globally without government subsidies or market intervention? The government seems to believe so, as reflected in its recent policies. But is this confidence well-founded, or a miscalculation that could jeopardise the backbone of the nation’s economy?

Grappling with provincial reforms

The International Monetary Fund (IMF) considers the passage of the law for the introduction of agricultural income tax by all four provincial assemblies a landmark step and says that the Fund and Pakistan have agreed that a lot needs to be done on the ground for effective recoveries starting next year’s budget. The two sides will remain engaged over the next couple of months to address technical a

An endless economic sprint

Pakistan’s economy is like a runner on a treadmill whose pace is controlled by the International Monetary Fund’s (IMF) conditions. With each bailout, the treadmill speeds up, and our poor runner sweats blood in the form of reduced subsidies, indirect tax hikes, and tariff increases. The real question does not circle around the speed of the treadmill; it now focuses on how to get off. Unfortunat

Finance: Challenges to industrial growth

During the last quarter of this fiscal year, beginning April 1, Pakistan’s industrial sector may see a stronger policy push for growth as the current regime is working on an industrial revival plan. Two things are to be considered: first, the potential revival plan’s implementation will remain subject to the continuation of the tenous political stability, the extent of success in the anti-terro

Financing climate resilience in Gilgit-Baltistan

Gilgit-Baltistan is strategically located at the confluence of three of the world’s most formidable mountain ranges: the Himalayas, the Karakoram, and the Hindu Kush. This region is home to over 7,000 glaciers, earning it the title of the “Third Pole”. These glaciers, with almost 75 per cent of the total water supply in the country, serve as a vital hydrological resource for Pakistan. Beyond th