Pakistan's Economic Collapse: How Decades of Mismanagement Created a Crisis

Pakistan's economy faces severe structural challenges that threaten long-term stability according to the State Bank's latest report. Decades of fiscal mismanagement have created a dangerous debt spiral where government revenues barely cover interest payments. The country suffers from critically low domestic savings and consumption-driven growth that depends on remittances rather than productivity. With 44% of the population in poverty and repeated climate disasters disrupting agriculture, urgent reforms in education and financial inclusion are needed to break this cycle.

Key Points: Pakistan Economic Crisis Deepens as State Bank Warns of Collapse

  • Persistent fiscal deficits and dwindling domestic savings threaten economic stability
  • Climate disasters in Punjab and KP could reignite inflation and supply issues
  • Consumption makes up 92% of GDP, showing unsustainable growth patterns
  • Nearly one-third of Pakistanis remain outside the formal financial system
  • Massive state-owned enterprise losses crowd out private sector credit
  • 44% poverty rate and youth demographic pressure demand urgent education reforms
2 min read

Decades of fiscal mismanagement push Pakistan toward economic collapse

State Bank of Pakistan warns fiscal mismanagement, low savings, and climate disasters threaten economic collapse. Learn about the debt spiral and urgent reforms needed.

"low income levels, fiscal imbalances, and weak financial intermediation - State Bank of Pakistan Report"

Karachi, October 17

Pakistan's fragile economy faces deep-rooted structural challenges that threaten long-term stability, warned the State Bank of Pakistan (SBP) in its Annual Report on the State of the Economy 2024-25.

The report highlights how persistent fiscal deficits, dwindling domestic savings, weak productivity, and repeated climate disasters have locked the country in a cycle of stagnation and dependency, as reported by The Express Tribune.

According to The Express Tribune, the SBP projects GDP growth between 3.25 per cent and 4.25 per cent for the fiscal year 2026, with inflation likely to stay in the 5-7 per cent range. The current account deficit is expected to remain around 0-1 per cent of GDP, indicating relative external stability.

Yet, the central bank warned that recent floods in Punjab and Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, which devastated vast agricultural lands, could trigger new supply chain disruptions and reignite inflation. While reconstruction spending may temporarily boost growth, it risks widening Pakistan's already precarious fiscal gap.

The SBP report identifies low domestic savings as one of Pakistan's most persistent weaknesses. Over the past two decades, savings have fallen to one of the lowest levels among developing economies. The report notes that "low income levels, fiscal imbalances, and weak financial intermediation" have stifled the capacity of citizens to save or invest productively. With consumption making up 92 per cent of GDP, Pakistan's growth remains consumption-driven and unsustainable, reliant on remittances and foreign borrowing rather than genuine economic productivity.

SBP expressed concern over Pakistan's "debt spiral," where government revenues barely cover interest payments, leaving little for social or development sectors.

Massive losses from inefficient state-owned enterprises, coupled with a banking system crowded out by public borrowing, have further restricted credit availability to the private sector. Adding to the challenge, nearly a third of Pakistanis remain outside the formal financial system, depending instead on informal mechanisms such as gold holdings, livestock, and rotating savings committees (ROSCAs).

Religious reservations toward interest-based banking and poor financial literacy continue to obstruct financial inclusion efforts, as cited by The Express Tribune.

The report summarised that Pakistan risks deeper economic marginalisation. With 65% of its population under 30 and poverty affecting nearly 44%, the SBP urged the government to prioritise education, skill-building, and technology investment to break free from the low-savings, high-debt cycle stifling national progress, as reported by The Express Tribune.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

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Priya S
Very sad to see our neighboring country in this situation. The youth population of 65% under 30 should be an asset, but without proper education and jobs, it becomes a liability. Hope they can turn things around for the common people's sake. 🙏
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Arjun K
The consumption-driven economy at 92% of GDP is unsustainable. India faced similar challenges but our focus on manufacturing and exports has helped. Pakistan needs to fix its fundamentals - savings, investment, and productivity. No shortcuts here.
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Sarah B
While the economic situation is concerning, we should be careful about how we discuss this. Many ordinary Pakistanis are suffering, and economic collapse affects real people, not just governments. Let's hope for regional stability and prosperity for all.
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Vikram M
The state-owned enterprises draining resources is a familiar story. India has been working on disinvestment and privatization to fix this. Pakistan needs serious structural reforms, but political will seems lacking. Tough times ahead for their economy. 💸
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Michael C
As someone working in international development, I see this pattern across many developing nations. The combination of climate disasters, weak institutions, and low savings creates a perfect storm. Pakistan needs immediate technical assistance and policy reforms.

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