CW Pakistan
  • Legacy
    • Legacy Editorial
    • Editor’s Note
  • Academy
  • Wired
  • Cellcos
  • PayTech
  • Business
  • Ignite
  • Digital Pakistan
  • PSEB
    • DFDI
    • Indus AI Week
  • PASHA
  • TechAdvisor
  • GamePro
  • Partnerships
  • PCWorld
  • Macworld
  • Infoworld
  • TechHive
  • TechAdvisor
0
0
0
0
0
Subscribe
CW Pakistan
CW Pakistan CW Pakistan
  • Legacy
    • Legacy Editorial
    • Editor’s Note
  • Academy
  • Wired
  • Cellcos
  • PayTech
  • Business
  • Ignite
  • Digital Pakistan
  • PSEB
    • DFDI
    • Indus AI Week
  • PASHA
  • TechAdvisor
  • GamePro
  • Partnerships
  • Business

IMF Sets 11 New Conditions on Pakistan’s Economy Including Budget Approval and Energy Reforms

  • May 18, 2025
Total
0
Shares
0
0
0
Share
Tweet
Share
Share
Share
Share

ISLAMABAD – The International Monetary Fund (IMF) has imposed 11 additional conditions on Pakistan as part of its ongoing $7 billion lending program, raising the total number of conditions to 50. The latest demands include the approval of a new Rs17.6 trillion budget, increasing the debt servicing surcharge on electricity bills, and lifting restrictions on importing used cars older than three years.

The IMF’s Staff Level report, released on Saturday, highlights rising geopolitical tensions between Pakistan and India as a significant risk to Pakistan’s fiscal, external, and reform targets. Despite heightened tensions over the past two weeks, market reactions have been relatively muted, with the stock market maintaining its recent gains and spreads widening only moderately.

The IMF’s projection for Pakistan’s defense budget in the upcoming fiscal year stands at Rs2.414 trillion, reflecting a 12% increase of Rs252 billion. However, Pakistan’s government plans to allocate over Rs2.5 trillion to defense, marking an 18% rise following recent hostilities with India.

One of the key new conditions mandates parliamentary approval of the fiscal year 2026 budget aligned with IMF targets by the end of June 2025. The total federal budget is projected at Rs17.6 trillion, with Rs1.07 trillion earmarked for development spending. Interest payments are expected to reach Rs8.7 trillion, with an overall deficit of Rs6.6 trillion and a primary budget surplus of Rs2.1 trillion.

The IMF also introduced new requirements for Pakistan’s provinces, asking them to implement new Agriculture Income Tax laws via a comprehensive plan that includes operational infrastructure for tax return processing, taxpayer registration, public communication, and compliance strategies. The deadline for provincial compliance is June 2025.

Governance reforms are another focal point, with Pakistan required to publish a governance action plan addressing critical vulnerabilities identified by the IMF’s Governance Diagnostic Assessment. Additionally, the government must adjust the unconditional cash transfer program annually for inflation to maintain the purchasing power of recipients.

In the energy sector, four new conditions have been set. The government must issue notifications for annual electricity tariff rebasing by July 1, 2025, and semi-annual gas tariff adjustments by February 15, 2026, to ensure tariffs reflect cost recovery. Furthermore, Parliament must pass legislation by the end of May to make the captive power levy ordinance permanent and remove the Rs3.21 per unit cap on the debt service surcharge by the end of June. This surcharge increase is aimed at addressing inefficiencies in the power sector that have contributed to Pakistan’s circular debt crisis.

On trade liberalization, the IMF demands that Pakistan remove quantitative restrictions on importing used motor vehicles. Currently limited to cars up to three years old, the government is required to submit legislation by the end of July to allow imports of vehicles up to five years old, enhancing affordability and market access.

Besides the new conditions, the IMF has extended deadlines on four delayed implementation targets. While Pakistan met all seven quantitative performance criteria for December 2024—including foreign reserves, cash transfer spending, new tax filings, and budget deficit ceilings—it missed targets related to health and education spending, net tax revenue from the Federal Board of Revenue (FBR), and tax revenues from retailers under the Tajir Dost scheme.

Structural benchmarks have seen mixed progress, with successful approval of a National Fiscal Pact and amendments to bank resolution laws. However, legislation delays on provincial Agricultural Income Tax, Civil Servants Act, and Sovereign Wealth Fund Acts remain concerns. Missed benchmarks related to undercapitalized banks and captive power producers are expected to be resolved through forthcoming policy actions.

The IMF’s new conditions underscore the challenging path Pakistan must navigate to stabilize its economy, address energy inefficiencies, and meet its reform commitments amid geopolitical tensions.

Share
Tweet
Share
Share
Share
Previous Article
  • GamePro

Pakistan Games Collective Launches to Unite and Empower Game Builders Nationwide

  • May 18, 2025
Read More
Next Article
  • Cellcos

Pakistan’s 5G Spectrum Auction Delayed by Four Months Amid Telenor-PTCL Merger Uncertainty

  • May 19, 2025
Read More
You May Also Like
Read More
  • Business

FBR Enforces Digital Eye Video Analytics System For Textile Spinning Units To Monitor Cotton Bales

  • Press Desk
  • February 21, 2026
Read More
  • Business

Walee Qualified Bidder For HBL PSL Media Rights 2026 To 2029 With Commerce Driven Model

  • Press Desk
  • February 20, 2026
Read More
  • Business

Yango Pakistan Launches Baikhtiyar Pakistan With NowPDP To Empower Persons With Disabilities

  • Press Desk
  • February 19, 2026
Read More
  • Business

Pakistan Mobile Phone Imports Surge 31 Percent In 7MFY26 As Demand Recovers

  • Press Desk
  • February 18, 2026
Read More
  • Business

Pakistan IT Exports Rise To 2.61 Billion Dollars In Seven Months Despite January Slowdown

  • Press Desk
  • February 18, 2026
Read More
  • Business

Pakistan Plans 20 Percent Federal Excise Duty On Imported Mobile Phones To Boost Local Manufacturing

  • Press Desk
  • February 18, 2026
Read More
  • Business

VEON And Nutshell Group Partner To Launch The Global Connect Platform For Cross Border Investment And Digital Cooperation

  • Press Desk
  • February 18, 2026
Read More
  • Business

TPL Trakker Extends Intelligent Operations And Compliance Solutions From Wafi Energy Pakistan Limited To NETCO

  • Press Desk
  • February 18, 2026
Trending Posts
  • Centre Of Excellence For Digital And Hi Tech Skills Launched At IMSciences Peshawar
    • February 22, 2026
  • NICAT and CESVI Partner to Deploy Climate-Tech and Disaster Resilience Solutions Across Pakistan
    • February 21, 2026
  • Google Launches America India Connect With 15 Billion Dollar AI Infrastructure Investment
    • February 21, 2026
  • Satellite Internet Rollout In Pakistan Stalled As Starlink OneWeb And Amazon Kuiper Await Licensing
    • February 21, 2026
  • Tom Cruise And Brad Pitt Star In AI-Generated Fight Video, Hollywood Responds
    • February 21, 2026
about
CWPK Legacy
Launched in 1967 internationally, ComputerWorld is the oldest tech magazine/media property in the world. In Pakistan, ComputerWorld was launched in 1995. Initially providing news to IT executives only, once CIO Pakistan, its sister brand from the same family, was launched and took over the enterprise reporting domain in Pakistan, CWPK has emerged as a holistic technology media platform reporting everything tech in the country. It remains the oldest continuous IT publishing brand in the country and in 2025 is set to turn 30 years old, which will be its biggest benchmark and a legacy it hopes to continue for years to come. CWPK is part of the SPIN/IDG Wakhan media umbrella.
Read more
Explore Computerworld Sites Globally
  • computerworld.es
  • computerworld.com.pt
  • computerworld.com
  • cw.no
  • computerworldmexico.com.mx
  • computerwoche.de
  • computersweden.idg.se
  • computerworld.hu
Content from other IDG brands
  • PCWorld
  • Macworld
  • Infoworld
  • TechHive
  • TechAdvisor
CW Pakistan CW Pakistan
  • CWPK
  • CXO
  • DEMO
  • WALLET

CW Media & all its sub-brands are copyrighted to SPIN-IDG Wakhan Media Inc., the publishing arm of NCC-RP Group. This site is designed by Crunch Collective. ©️1995-2026. Read Privacy Policy.

Input your search keywords and press Enter.