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45% of Pakistan's Population Lives in Poverty Amid Governance Crisis

A report published in The Dawn reveals that nearly 45% of Pakistan's population is living in poverty amid a deepening governance and institutional crisis. The report attributes Pakistan's recurring economic crises to a leadership deficit and weakening institutions, not just IMF programme failures. Key indicators show a sharp decline in private sector credit, SME financing, and exports over the past two decades. The report warns that continued governance failures and exclusion of capable individuals could further erode Pakistan's growth prospects.

45 pc of Pakistan's population living in poverty amid governance crisis: Report

New Delhi, June 16

Nearly 45 per cent of Pakistan's population is living in poverty amid a deepening governance and institutional crisis that continues to undermine the country's economic potential, a report has said.

A report published in The Dawn said Pakistan's recurring economic crises are not solely the result of IMF programmes or economic policy failures but stem from a broader leadership deficit and weakening institutions.

The country has repeatedly entered IMF-supported programmes, achieving temporary macroeconomic stability but failing to address underlying economic weaknesses, it added.

In addition, it pointed to a sharp decline in financial support for businesses, noting that Pakistan's private sector credit-to-GDP ratio has fallen from 27 per cent in 2008 to just 8.7 per cent in 2025, among the lowest levels across emerging economies.

Small and medium enterprises (SMEs) have witnessed a significant decline in financing. SME lending has dropped from around 17 per cent in the mid-2000s to just 6 per cent.

Meanwhile, exports came at 10 per cent of GDP, down from 17 per cent two decades ago, reflecting the country's inability to diversify and strengthen its industrial base.

Patronage networks and political interference have weakened the civil service and public institutions, discouraging merit-based decision-making and reducing administrative efficiency, it said.

The report raised concerns about Pakistan's judicial system, citing more than two million pending cases in district courts and over 1,100 vacant judicial positions, which it said have weakened contract enforcement and investor confidence.

Boards of state-owned enterprises, regulatory authorities and major institutions are frequently populated through personal connections rather than merit, limiting accountability and effective oversight.

Pakistan possesses significant economic potential due to its large population, entrepreneurial base and strategic location, but warned that continued governance failures and the exclusion of capable individuals from decision-making processes could further erode the country's growth prospects, the report said.

— IANS

Reader Comments

Priya S

Sad to see a whole generation growing up in poverty. The report rightly points to leadership deficit and political interference. Pakistan needs a fundamental reset of its governance model, not just another IMF bailout package. 😐

Rohit P

The drop in private sector credit from 27% to 8.7% of GDP is alarming. Indian SMEs get much better support through Mudra loans and other schemes. Pakistan's entrepreneurs are being starved of capital, which explains their economic stagnation.

Kavya N

More than 2 million pending cases and only 1,100 judicial vacancies unfilled - no wonder investor confidence is low. Pakistan's judiciary must be reformed urgently. We in India also have pendency issues but the scale there is far worse in proportion.

James A

As an outsider, it's striking how political patronage has hollowed out institutions that should be merit-based. Pakistan's loss is a cautionary tale for developing nations. India should double down on strengthening its own systems to avoid a similar fate.

Nisha Z

While the poverty figures are shocking, I sometimes feel India should be more empathetic. Governance failures can happen anywhere. The article mentions 'exclusion of capable individuals' - that's something all countries, including ours, must guard against.

Siddharth J

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

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