The government has announced that it will commission an independent audit of its flagship Cashless Economy Initiative 2025, a wide-ranging reform program aimed at transforming Pakistan into a digitally enabled and transparent financial system. The decision reflects the administration’s commitment to ensuring accountability, efficiency, and credibility in one of the most ambitious economic initiatives undertaken in recent years.
Launched earlier this year, the Cashless Economy Initiative 2025 seeks to promote transparency, broaden financial inclusion, expand the national tax base, improve service delivery, and plug systemic leakages in government transactions. The program has been positioned as a cornerstone of Pakistan’s digital economy strategy, designed to integrate innovation with fiscal reform while addressing the country’s long-standing governance challenges.
Since June 2025, a high-level committee chaired by the Prime Minister has been supervising the initiative with weekly reviews to monitor its implementation. To drive execution in priority areas, the government has also established three specialized committees focusing on digital payments adoption and innovation, digital public infrastructure, and government payments. Together, these committees are working to ensure that the transition toward a cashless economy is both inclusive and sustainable.
One of the key elements of the initiative is the digitization of all government-to-person (G2P) and person-to-government (P2G) payments, ensuring that citizen-facing transactions become faster, more transparent, and less prone to leakages. Simultaneously, measures are being taken to enable retailers nationwide to adopt digital payment solutions. Critical infrastructure, including the Raast instant payment system and QR-based payment networks, is being scaled up to support the rapid expansion of digital financial services.
Recognizing the scale and complexity of the reforms, the government has now decided to bring in a qualified international consultancy firm to conduct a comprehensive performance audit. The firm will be selected through a competitive bidding process and tasked with evaluating the initiative’s design, implementation, governance, and measurable outcomes. According to official documents, the audit will assess whether the program is on track to meet its objectives, highlight risks and gaps, and provide actionable recommendations for strengthening both current operations and future phases of the initiative.
The audit’s scope will cover compliance with government directives, the realism of set targets, and the adequacy of policy, institutional, and technological frameworks. It will also evaluate implementation strategies, resource allocation, and coordination between government and private stakeholders. Quantitative metrics such as transaction volumes, user adoption, merchant participation, and geographic coverage will form a key part of the analysis. Trends in Raast transactions, QR-code usage, digital wallet penetration, and digitized government payments will also be closely reviewed.
In addition, the consultancy will examine the performance of the three oversight committees, assess monitoring and evaluation systems, and identify opportunities for enhancing governance. Officials noted that the consultant will also be expected to recommend improvements to ensure more effective and timely execution of the initiative. The audit is further expected to propose new interventions under the broader Cashless Pakistan agenda, helping the government adapt to changing market dynamics and international benchmarks.
The commissioning of an independent review underscores the state’s intent to not only modernize Pakistan’s financial landscape but also to do so in a transparent and accountable manner. By engaging external experts, the government aims to build confidence among stakeholders and international partners, while ensuring that the reforms deliver long-term impact.
As Pakistan continues to embrace digital transformation, the Cashless Economy Initiative 2025 is viewed as a defining step in reshaping the country’s financial ecosystem. The upcoming audit will play a critical role in ensuring that the initiative is implemented effectively and positions Pakistan as a competitive player in the global digital economy.