Islamabad, December 24, 2025: Federal Minister for Finance and Revenue Muhammad Aurangzeb has said that Pakistan has reached a critical economic turning point, with macroeconomic stability, sustained reforms, and policy continuity restoring confidence and steering the country towards export-led, long-term growth.
In an interview with USA Today, the finance minister noted that while economic growth of 2.7 percent in the previous fiscal year was a positive development, it remains insufficient to meet the needs of Pakistan’s rapidly growing population. He stressed that macroeconomic stability is creating new opportunities for both domestic and global investors and positioning the country for sustainable economic expansion.
Aurangzeb said the current transition has been enabled by macroeconomic stabilisation, easing inflation, and improved external balances. He highlighted that the government is driving export-led, productivity-based growth through structural reforms, maintaining reform momentum despite challenges, and actively encouraging global investment in sectors such as agriculture, minerals, technology, and climate resilience.
The finance minister noted that Pakistan has entered fiscal year 2025 from a position of renewed strength, marked by improving external balances and a firm commitment to structural reform. For the first time in several years, he said, the country has achieved both a primary fiscal surplus and a current account surplus, signalling a decisive shift away from recurring deficits. Strong remittance inflows have supported this turnaround, while inflation has declined sharply from a peak of 38 percent to single-digit levels.
‘Sustainable growth remains the central challenge’
Senator Aurangzeb emphasised that while macroeconomic stabilisation provides a critical foundation, sustainable growth remains Pakistan’s central challenge. Drawing lessons from the past, he said the country is deliberately moving away from a consumption- and debt-driven growth model towards an export-led strategy.
He explained that the current budget reflects this shift through structural reforms in taxation, energy pricing, and state-owned enterprises, alongside wide-ranging tariff reforms aimed at dismantling decades of protectionism and enhancing global competitiveness. Aligning with changing global demand patterns, he identified information technology services, textiles, and agricultural exports as key growth areas.
The finance minister noted that IT exports have already crossed $4 billion and could double within five years with sustained regulatory clarity and infrastructure development. He added that efforts are underway to simplify tax regimes for exporters and reduce bureaucratic hurdles to improve long-term productivity and competitiveness.
Beyond fiscal numbers
Addressing the broader reform agenda, Aurangzeb said privatisation of state-owned enterprises, tariff liberalisation, and restructuring of the energy sector are intended to address deep-rooted inefficiencies that have historically strained public finances. These reforms, he added, align with the World Bank’s assessment of Pakistan’s potential “East Asia moment.”
He referred to the recently agreed ten-year Country Partnership Framework with the World Bank—the first of its kind—which places equal emphasis on economic reform, climate resilience, and population management.
The finance minister underscored that Pakistan’s future hinges on addressing challenges beyond fiscal indicators, including population growth, climate change, child stunting, learning poverty, and the exclusion of girls from education. He stressed that increasing women’s participation in education and the workforce is both a social imperative and an economic necessity. On climate resilience, he highlighted Pakistan’s engagement with multilateral partners to improve preparedness against increasingly frequent floods and droughts.
‘Discipline, consistency, and cooperation key’
While acknowledging ongoing risks such as global commodity price shocks, external debt pressures, and political uncertainty, Senator Aurangzeb reaffirmed the government’s commitment to staying the reform course. He said discipline, consistency, and international cooperation remain essential to safeguarding recent economic gains.
Highlighting opportunities for investors, he pointed to agriculture, minerals and mining, and the emerging digital economy as priority sectors. He drew attention to Pakistan’s agricultural potential, the strategic importance of the Tethyan Copper Belt in Balochistan amid rising global demand for critical minerals, and the growing focus on data centres, artificial intelligence, and digital services.
Concluding the interview, the finance minister invited the international community to engage with Pakistan through trade, investment, and collaboration. Emphasising reform momentum and economic potential, he said Pakistan is transitioning from a narrative of crisis management to one of opportunity and transformation, offering promising prospects for global partners willing to engage with a market on the cusp of sustainable growth.





