Speaking Truth to Oppressed

IMF identifies 9 flaws in Pakistan’s finance system

IMF identifies 9 flaws in Pakistan’s finance system

IMF identifies 9 flaws in Pakistan’s finance system.

The International Monetary Fund (IMF) has highlighted nine major shortcomings in Pakistan’s public financial management system, warning that weak budget monitoring and governance gaps are undermining fiscal discipline.

The government, however, assured the lender that it is taking concrete steps to improve transparency and curb corruption.

IMF report highlights major issues

According to the IMF’s Corruption and Diagnostic Assessment Report, Pakistan’s public investment system suffers from several serious flaws.

The Fund raised alarm over delayed projects, rising expenses, and the inclusion of politically driven schemes in the Public Sector Development Programme (PSDP) without following due procedure.

Also read: India asks IMF to reconsider Pakistan loan programme

The report also flagged risks in multi-year budgeting, noting that limitations in oversight increase opportunities for corruption.

Strict budget monitoring

The IMF emphasized that strict budget monitoring is necessary to enforce fiscal discipline.

Ministries, including finance, planning, and the Federal Board of Revenue (FBR), along with other stakeholders, briefed the Fund on the progress.

Further discussions on the proposed reforms are expected during the IMF mission’s upcoming visit to Pakistan.

Govt’s response and reforms

In response, Pakistani authorities informed the IMF about multiple steps taken to improve governance. These include:

  • Establishment of a Financial Monitoring Unit (FMU)
  • Asset declarations for civil officers and the bureaucracy
  • Prioritizing the fast completion of foreign-funded and under-construction projects
  • Closure of 344 slow-moving projects worth Rs2.518 billion
  • Launch of a digital transformation process to ensure transparency in high-risk projects
  • Introduction of an intelligent project automation system in the Ministry of Planning

Officials stressed that these reforms are aimed at curbing misuse of funds, preventing corruption, and strengthening accountability.

IMF pushes for sustained implementation

According to the sources, the IMF has also been informed of the measures being taken to improve tax revenue and curb corruption. It welcomed the government’s commitment but insisted that sustained implementation will be key to restoring financial discipline.

Another critical gap highlighted by the IMF is the lack of prioritization in development projects, which has led to inefficiency, overlapping initiatives, and inflated costs.

The Fund urged Islamabad to restructure its investment framework to ensure resources are directed to high-impact projects.

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