Analysis

Pakistan’s Economic Rebound: Why the Central Bank Sees Brighter Growth Than the IMF in 2026

Published

on

A closer look at competing forecasts reveals a nation threading the needle between recovery and risk

Pakistan’s economy stands at a peculiar crossroads in early 2026. While international institutions hedge their bets with cautious projections, the country’s central bank is painting a decidedly more optimistic picture—one backed by emerging data that suggests the South Asian nation may finally be breaking free from years of boom-bust cycles.

At the heart of this divergence lies a fundamental disagreement over trajectory. The State Bank of Pakistan (SBP) projects GDP growth between 3.75% and 4.75% for fiscal year 2026 (July 2025-June 2026), a forecast that sits notably above the International Monetary Fund’s more conservative 3.2% estimate. It’s not just numbers on a spreadsheet—this gap represents competing visions of Pakistan’s economic resilience amid floods, export contractions, and global uncertainty.

The Optimist in the Room

Speaking through written responses to Reuters this week, SBP Governor Jameel Ahmad made his case with the confidence of someone watching real-time indicators most analysts don’t yet see. “All these sources and indicators, along with FY26-Q1 data, point to a broad-based recovery in all three sectors of the economy,” Ahmad stated, emphasizing that the rebound extends beyond headline figures into agriculture, industry, and services.

The numbers support his optimism to a degree. Pakistan’s economy expanded 3.7% year-over-year in the first quarter of FY26, compared to a mere 1.6% in the same period last year. Large-scale manufacturing—often considered the bellwether of industrial health—posted 6% growth during July-November 2025, with the Quantum Index of Manufacturing reaching its highest level since FY2016. Automobiles surged 61% year-over-year in November, petroleum products jumped 44%, and even wearing apparel climbed 18%.

These aren’t marginal improvements. They suggest something fundamental may be shifting in Pakistan’s economic machinery, particularly as financial conditions ease following a cumulative 1,150 basis points in policy rate cuts since June 2024. The SBP’s benchmark rate now sits at 10.5%, down from a punishing 22% that choked off growth during the 2023 crisis.

Why the IMF Sees Things Differently

The Fund’s January 2026 World Economic Outlook Update tells a more subdued story, downgrading Pakistan’s FY26 growth forecast from 3.6% to 3.2%—a revision that reflects persistent concerns about structural weaknesses. The IMF’s caution isn’t unfounded. Pakistan’s export earnings fell 8.7% year-over-year in the first half of FY26, declining to $15.18 billion from $16.63 billion in the same period last year. The trade deficit widened as imports climbed back to $5.5 billion monthly, up from $3.5 billion during the height of capital controls.

Moreover, the IMF’s assessment incorporates the economic drag from 2025’s devastating floods, which Finance Minister Muhammad Aurangzeb acknowledged would shave 0.5 percentage points off GDP growth. The disaster killed over 1,000 people and caused at least $2.9 billion in damage to agriculture and infrastructure—a reminder that Pakistan remains among the world’s most climate-vulnerable nations despite contributing less than 1% of global emissions.

“The flooding this year is going to shave off roughly point 5% from our GDP growth forecast, so it’s real,” Aurangzeb said at a population summit, underscoring that climate adaptation can no longer be treated as an academic discussion but must be embedded in fiscal planning.

The World Bank projects 3.0% growth for FY26, while S&P Global Market Intelligence forecasts 3.5% for FY26 rising to 4.4% in FY27. The Asian Development Bank sits at 3.0% for 2026. The consensus among multilateral lenders: Pakistan is recovering, but fragility remains high.

The Hidden Strength: Remittances and Resilience

Here’s where Ahmad’s confidence finds solid footing. Workers’ remittances surged 11.3% to $23.2 billion during July-January FY26, with January alone bringing in $3.5 billion—a 15.4% year-over-year increase. The SBP governor projects remittances will reach $42 billion by year’s end, which would represent the highest annual inflow on record and play a crucial role in keeping the current account deficit within the projected 0-1% of GDP range.

This matters enormously. Pakistan’s previous growth spurts often led to currency pressure and reserve depletion as imports surged faster than export earnings. But sustained remittance growth—driven by higher manpower exports, reduced gaps between formal and informal exchange rates, and government incentive packages—is providing a more stable external financing cushion.

Foreign exchange reserves tell a similar story of improvement. SBP reserves surpassed $16.1 billion in mid-January, exceeding the IMF program target, with Governor Ahmad projecting they’ll climb to $18 billion by June 2026 and potentially $20.2 billion by December 2026. That would mark an all-time high, a far cry from the $2.8 billion nadir of early 2023 when Pakistan teetered on the edge of default.

Agriculture: Performing Beyond Expectations

Perhaps the most surprising element of Ahmad’s optimism centers on agriculture, which accounts for roughly 23% of GDP. Despite last year’s floods affecting significant swaths of farmland, the sector has demonstrated remarkable resilience. “Agricultural activity had remained resilient despite floods, and it is even performing better than its targets,” the governor noted.

High-frequency indicators suggest crop output recovered faster than anticipated, partly due to improved water management and rapid post-flood rehabilitation. This matters not just for GDP accounting but for food inflation, employment in rural areas where 60% of Pakistanis live, and the political stability that flows from keeping staple prices in check.

The contrast with 2022’s catastrophic floods—which submerged one-third of the country and caused an estimated $30 billion in losses—is instructive. Authorities have learned, albeit expensively, that pre-positioning disaster response and accelerating agricultural credit disbursement can significantly mitigate economic fallout.

The Manufacturing Momentum

Large-scale manufacturing’s rebound deserves closer examination. The 6% growth in July-November wasn’t uniform—machinery and equipment contracted 16%, and leather products fell 2.3%—but the breadth of expansion across 16 industrial groups suggests this isn’t a one-sector story.

Cement dispatches rose 9.7% to 25.8 million tonnes in July-December, reflecting construction sector revival. Food and beverages, coke and petroleum products, and electrical equipment all posted solid gains. According to Topline Securities, the brokerage increased its LSM growth target from 2.5% to 4.0% for FY26 based on sustained momentum into the second quarter.

The question is whether this industrial recovery can translate into export competitiveness. Governor Ahmad argues that export declines reflect “low global prices and border disruptions rather than softer activity”—a claim that finds some support in high-frequency production data but remains contentious among trade analysts who point to persistent competitiveness challenges.

Inflation: The Dog That Hasn’t Barked

One of Pakistan’s most remarkable achievements has been taming inflation, which peaked at 38% in May 2023 but dropped to a historic low of 3.2% by June 2025. The SBP now projects inflation will remain within the 5-7% target range during both FY26 and FY27, barring near-term volatility.

This inflation-growth combination—if sustained—would be unprecedented in Pakistan’s recent history. Previous growth accelerations typically coincided with surging prices as supply constraints bound quickly. The current episode suggests structural improvements in food supply chains, reduced import dependency for key staples, and credible monetary policy may be creating a different dynamic.

Still, risks abound. Global commodity price volatility, particularly for oil and food, could quickly upend projections. Recent border closures with Afghanistan have disrupted trade flows, while the specter of new global tariffs under shifting U.S. trade policy adds uncertainty.

Comparing Regional Trajectories

Context matters. India’s economy is projected to grow 6.4% in FY26 according to the IMF, while Bangladesh faces its own set of challenges with growth forecasts around 5-5.5%. Pakistan’s 3.75-4.75% range—if achieved—would represent solid recovery but still trail regional peers in absolute terms.

The gap reflects deeper structural differences. India has successfully diversified its export base, attracted significant foreign direct investment in manufacturing and technology, and built a services sector that now accounts for 55% of GDP. Bangladesh leveraged its garment industry into a export powerhouse, though political instability in 2025 has created new uncertainties.

Pakistan’s challenge is threading a narrower needle: maintaining macroeconomic stability while implementing productivity-enhancing structural reforms that can lift trend growth above 4-5%. Governor Ahmad acknowledged this explicitly, noting that “productivity-enhancing structural reforms will be essential over the medium term to achieve higher and more sustainable growth.”

What This Means for Investors

For international investors eyeing Pakistani assets, the divergent forecasts present both opportunity and risk. Pakistani equities have rallied on improving macro fundamentals, with the KSE-100 index posting strong gains through late 2025 and early 2026. Corporate earnings in cement, banking, and consumer goods have exceeded expectations as borrowing costs declined and domestic demand recovered.

Pakistan also plans to issue panda bonds—yuan-denominated debt sold in China’s domestic market—around the Lunar New Year as part of efforts to diversify external financing and broaden its investor base. This follows successful Eurobond placements that saw healthy demand from frontier market specialists betting on continued stabilization.

Yet sustainability concerns linger. Pakistan’s debt-to-GDP ratio, while declining from peak levels, remains elevated at around 72%. The IMF warns outstanding debt may increase to Rs117,441 billion by 2030, though the ratio should gradually decline to 60.7%. Interest payments are projected to consume ever-larger shares of the budget, limiting fiscal space for development spending.

Tax revenue remains a persistent weak spot. Despite government targets to raise the tax-to-GDP ratio to 13%, current projections suggest this goal is unlikely by 2030. Persistent tax evasion, narrow bases, and weak enforcement continue to constrain fiscal capacity.

The Role of Digital Economy Growth

One angle largely missing from traditional forecasts is the accelerating digitalization of Pakistan’s economy. Fintech adoption has surged, with mobile wallet users exceeding 100 million and digital payments growing rapidly. E-commerce platforms have proliferated, creating new retail channels and employment opportunities, particularly for young people and women in urban areas.

Governor Ahmad’s optimism may partly reflect these hard-to-measure but real shifts in how Pakistanis transact, save, and invest. Digital financial inclusion is creating formal economic activity that previous generations conducted entirely in cash, outside official statistics. The SBP has been notably forward-leaning in licensing digital banks and payment platforms, betting that financial technology can help leapfrog traditional infrastructure gaps.

Scenarios and Risks

Looking ahead, several scenarios could play out. In the optimistic case, policy rate cuts continue to percolate through the economy, manufacturing momentum sustains, and agriculture delivers another solid year despite climate risks. Remittances stay strong, the current account remains manageable, and foreign reserves continue building. In this scenario, Pakistan hits the upper end of SBP’s 4.75% growth forecast, validating Ahmad’s confidence.

The pessimistic scenario sees global commodity price spikes (particularly oil), renewed border tensions affecting trade, climate disasters exceeding current assumptions, and domestic political instability undermining reform momentum. Export competitiveness fails to improve, the trade deficit widens beyond projections, and reserves come under pressure. Growth settles toward the IMF’s 3.2% forecast or even lower.

The base case likely falls somewhere between—growth around 3.5-4.0%, muddling through with incremental improvements but lacking the breakout transformation Pakistan’s young, growing population needs. The difference between these scenarios often comes down to execution on structural reforms: tax administration, energy sector efficiency, privatization of loss-making state enterprises, and trade facilitation.

The Bottom Line

Is SBP Governor Jameel Ahmad right to be more optimistic than the IMF? The honest answer is that we’re watching competing narratives play out in real time, each supported by different data points and analytical frameworks.

Ahmad has high-frequency indicators, manufacturing rebounds, and remittance strength on his side. He sees financial conditions improving, agriculture resilient, and broad-based recovery taking hold. The IMF sees structural weaknesses, export fragility, climate vulnerability, and a track record of false starts. Both can be simultaneously correct depending on which risks materialize and which policy bets pay off.

What’s undeniable is that Pakistan’s economy in early 2026 looks meaningfully better than it did 12 or 24 months ago. Inflation has cooled, reserves have rebuilt, growth has resumed, and the immediate crisis has passed. Whether this evolves into sustainable, inclusive development or proves another temporary respite in a longer cycle of instability remains Pakistan’s defining economic question.

For now, Governor Ahmad is making his case with conviction backed by emerging data. The next two quarters will reveal whether his optimism was prescient—or premature.


Analysis based on State Bank of Pakistan Monetary Policy Report (February 2026), IMF World Economic Outlook Update (January 2026), and reports from Reuters, Bloomberg, Financial Times, World Bank, and Asian Development Bank.

Leave a ReplyCancel reply

Trending

Exit mobile version