IMF, Pakistan reach staff-level agreement for $1.2bn loan
2026-03-28 - 05:11
Washington: The International Monetary Fund (IMF) has reached a staff-level agreement with Pakistan to provide approximately $1.2 billion under its ongoing financial programs, according to a press release. The agreement covers the third review of the 37-month Extended Fund Facility (EFF) and the second review of the 28-month Resilience and Sustainability Facility (RSF). The staff-level agreement is subject to approval by the IMF Executive Board. Upon approval, Pakistan will have access to about US$1.0 billion (SDR 760 million) under the EFF and about US$210 million (SDR 154 million) under the RSF, bringing total disbursements under the two arrangements to about US$4.5 billion. “Supported by the EFF, ongoing policies have continued to strengthen the economy and rebuild market confidence. Following the recovery in FY25, economic activity gained further momentum in the first part of the current fiscal year. Inflation and the current account balance remained contained, and external buffers continued to strengthen. The conflict in the Middle East, however, casts a cloud over the outlook as volatile energy prices and tighter global financial conditions risk putting upward pressure on inflation and weigh on growth and the current account, IMF said. “The authorities remain committed to pursuing sound and prudent macroeconomic policies to preserve the recent gains in macro-financial stabilization, while deepening structural reforms to accelerate growth and strengthening social protection to mitigate the impact of volatile energy prices on the most vulnerable. The authorities’ policy priorities include, the statment noted. According to IMF, the authorities remain committed to ensuring a sustainable fiscal position and reducing the still high public debt burden to more moderate levels over the medium term. To this end, efforts are ongoing to meeting the FY26 budget primary surplus of 1.6 percent of GDP and to target an underlying primary balance of 2 percent of GDP in FY27. Advancing fiscal structural reforms. Steadfast implementation of fiscal reforms remains critical to achieving the fiscal objectives. Revenue mobilization efforts have already started to yield results, with the FBR implementing priority actions under its transformation plan and developing key performance indicators to monitor progress. These priorities include strengthening taxpayer audits, expanding the use of digital invoicing and production monitoring, and enhancing the FBR’s internal governance. The newly established Tax Policy Office is developing a medium‐term tax reform strategy aimed at ensuring revenue neutrality and tax policy stability. In addition, efforts are underway to enhance fiscal burden‐sharing between federal and provincial governments and to strengthen public financial management. The authorities are aiming their efforts to providing more targeted support to the more effected households and are strengthening the Benazir Income Support Program (BISP), including through inflation‐adjusted cash transfers. In parallel, they remain committed to scaling up federal and provincial health and education spending, consistent with program objectives, to support human capital development and inclusive growth. Maintaining an appropriately tight and data-dependent monetary policy. The State Bank of Pakistan (SBP) remains committed to keeping inflation within its target range and stands ready to raise interest rates should price pressures intensify or inflation expectations rise, including from passthrough of recent volatility in global food and fuel prices. Exchange rate flexibility should continue to serve as the primary shock absorber, including against spillovers from the conflict in the Middle East, while the SBP should ensure that the banking system remains able to accommodate import financing and other external payments amid potentially elevated balance of payments pressures. Achieving energy sector viability. The authorities remain committed to achieving energy sector viability and preventing a recurrence of circular debt, which is detrimental to the economy. It is critical that sustainability is maintained through timely tariff adjustments that ensure cost recovery. Moreover, energy price subsidies should be avoided, given their regressivity, high fiscal costs, and distortionary impact. Advancing SOE reforms and the privatization agenda remains central to scaling back the state’s footprint and improving service delivery, alongside efforts to reduce government intervention in commodity markets and enable private sector initiatives. The authorities are also strengthening institutional capacity and intensifying anti‐corruption efforts to promote inclusive growth and ensure a level playing field for businesses and investment. Building resilience to climate change. Policies supported by the RSF, in line with national commitments—including recently implemented reforms to promote green mobility and transport decarbonization and to strengthen climate information systems and the management of climate related financial risks—are helping to build resilience, IMF added.