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Politics

The Debt Trap — Nearly Half of Pakistan’s Budget Consumed by Loan Repayments

Last updated: June 12, 2025 3:04 am
Hannan Kaimkhani
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The federal budget for 2025–26 reveals a sobering truth: Pakistan’s financial autonomy is under siege from its growing debt burden. A staggering 46.7% of the total federal budget — Rs8.2066 trillion out of Rs17.573 trillion — is earmarked for debt servicing, making it the single largest expenditure of the year.

Budget Snapshot

While this amount is Rs739 billion less than the revised Rs8.945 trillion for FY2024–25 — an 8.26% drop — it is still an alarming figure that highlights structural economic weaknesses rather than improvement.

Debt Servicing Breakdown:

  • Domestic debt repayment: Rs7.197 trillion

  • Foreign debt repayment: Rs1.009 trillion

Public Debt Status

As of March 2024, Pakistan’s total public debt stood at a massive Rs76.01 trillion (US$269 billion), having quadrupled over the past decade:

  • Domestic liabilities: Rs51.52 trillion

  • External liabilities: Rs24.49 trillion

This places the country’s debt at 66.27% of GDP, breaching the legal threshold set by the Fiscal Responsibility and Debt Limitation Act (FRDLA).

Interest Payments (First 9 Months of FY25):

  • Rs6.44 trillion total

    • Rs5.78 trillion to domestic lenders

    • Rs656 billion to foreign creditors

External Financing Imbalance

  • Inflow (Jul–Mar 2025): $5.07 billion

    • Multilateral: $2.8B

    • Commercial: $2.01B

    • Bilateral: $258M

  • Outflow: $5.636 billion

    • Multilateral repayments: $2.828B

    • Bilateral: $1.565B

    • Commercial: $1.243B

This negative net flow continues to strain Pakistan’s foreign exchange reserves.

The Vicious Cycle

Despite claims by the Ministry of Finance regarding improved cash planning and longer-term borrowing instruments, the fiscal situation remains bleak:

  • Private investment is shrinking

  • The rupee is under pressure

  • Inflation is rising

  • The government remains trapped in a cycle of borrowing to repay old loans

Conclusion: A Tipping Point?

With debt absorbing nearly half the national budget, Pakistan’s future development is at serious risk. Unless decisive reforms are introduced — from tax structure overhauls to spending discipline — the country may find itself locked in a perpetual debt crisis, sacrificing growth and welfare for survival.

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