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Pakistan’s crisis differs from world | The Express Tribune
Multiple elite clusters capture system as each extracts benefits in different ways
Pakistan’s ruling elite reinforces a blind nationalism, promoting the belief that the country does not need to learn from developed or emerging economies, as this serves their interests. PHOTO: FILE
KARACHI:
Elite capture is hardly a unique Pakistani phenomenon. Across developing economies – from Latin America to Sub-Saharan Africa and parts of South Asia – political and economic systems are often influenced, shaped, or quietly commandeered by narrow interest groups.
However, the latest IMF analysis of Pakistan’s political economy highlights a deeper, more entrenched strain of elite capture; one that is broader in composition, more durable in structure, and more corrosive in its fiscal consequences than what is commonly observed elsewhere. This difference matters because it shapes why repeated reform cycles have failed, why tax bases remain narrow, and why the state repeatedly slips back into crisis despite bailouts, stabilisation efforts, and policy resets.
Globally, elite capture typically operates through predictable channels: regulatory manipulation, favourable credit allocation, public-sector appointments, or preferential access to state contracts. In most emerging economies, these practices tend to be dominated by one or two elite blocs; often oligarchic business families or entrenched political networks.
In contrast, Pakistan’s system is not captured by a single group but by multiple competing elite clusters – military, political dynasties, large landholders, protected industrial lobbies, and urban commercial networks; each extracting benefits in different forms. Instead of acting as a unified oligarchic class, these groups engage in a form of competitive extraction, amplifying inefficiencies and leaving the state structurally weak.
The IMF’s identification of this fragmentation is crucial. Unlike countries where the dominant elite at least maintains a degree of policy coherence, such as Vietnam’s party-led model or Turkiye’s centralised political-business nexus, Pakistan’s fragmentation results in incoherent, stop-start economic governance, with every reform initiative caught in the crossfire of competing privileges.
For example, tax exemptions continue to favour both agricultural landholders and protected sectors despite broad consensus on the inefficiencies they generate. Meanwhile, state-owned enterprises continue to drain the budget due to overlapping political and bureaucratic interests that resist restructuring. These dynamics create a fiscal environment where adjustment becomes politically costly and therefore systematically delayed.
Another distinguishing characteristic is the fiscal footprint of elite capture in Pakistan. While elite influence is global, its measurable impact on Pakistan’s budget is unusually pronounced. Regressive tax structures, preferential energy tariffs, subsidised credit lines for favoured industries, and the persistent shielding of large informal commercial segments combine to erode the state’s revenue base.
The result is dependency on external financing and an inability to build buffers. Where other developing economies have expanded domestic taxation after crises, like Indonesia after the Asian financial crisis, Pakistan’s tax-to-GDP ratio has stagnated or deteriorated, repeatedly offset by politically negotiated exemptions.
Moreover, unlike countries where elite capture operates primarily through economic levers, Pakistan’s structure is intensely politico-establishment in design. This tri-layer configuration creates an institutional rigidity that is difficult to unwind. The civil-military imbalance limits parliamentary oversight of fiscal decisions, political fragmentation obstructs legislative reform, and bureaucratic inertia prevents implementation, even when policies are designed effectively.
In many ways, Pakistan’s challenge is not just elite capture; it is elite entanglement, where power is diffused, yet collectively resistant to change. Given these distinctions, the solutions cannot simply mimic generic reform templates applied in other developing economies. Pakistan requires a sequenced, politically aware reform agenda that aligns incentives rather than assuming an unrealistic national consensus.
First, broadening the tax base must be anchored in institutional credibility rather than coercion. The state has historically attempted forced compliance but has not invested in digitalisation, transparent tax administration, and trusted grievance mechanisms. Countries like Rwanda and Georgia demonstrate that tax reforms succeed only when the system is depersonalised and automated. Pakistan’s current reforms must similarly prioritise structural modernisation over episodic revenue drives.
Second, rationalising subsidies and preferential tariffs requires a political bargain that recognises the diversity of elite interests. Phasing out energy subsidies for specific sectors should be accompanied by productivity-linked support, time-bound transition windows, and export-competitiveness incentives. This shifts the debate from entitlement to performance, making reform politically feasible.
Third, Pakistan must reduce its SOE burden through a dual-track programme: commercial restructuring where feasible and privatisation or liquidation where not. Many countries, including Brazil and Malaysia, have stabilised finances by ring-fencing SOE losses. Pakistan needs a professional, autonomous holding company structure like Singapore’s Temasek to depoliticise SOE governance.
Fourth, politico-establishment reform is essential but must be approached through institutional incentives rather than confrontation. The creation of unified economic decision-making forums with transparent minutes, parliamentary reporting, and performance audits can gradually rebalance power. The goal is not confrontation, but alignment of national economic priorities with institutional roles.
Finally, political stability is the foundational prerequisite. Long-term reform cannot coexist with cyclical political resets. Countries that broke elite capture, such as South Korea in the 1960s or Indonesia in the 2000s, did so through sustained, multi-year policy continuity.
What differentiates Pakistan is not the existence of elite capture but its multi-polar, deeply institutionalised, fiscally destructive form. Yet this does not make reform impossible. It simply means the solutions must reflect the structural specificity of Pakistan’s governance. Undoing entrenched capture requires neither revolutionary rhetoric nor unrealistic expectations but a deliberate recalibration of incentives, institutions, and political alignments. Only through such a pragmatic approach can Pakistan shift from chronic crisis management to genuine economic renewal.
The writer is a financial market enthusiast and is associated with Pakistan’s stocks, commodities and emerging technology
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SBP receives final $1bn from Saudi Arabia, bringing total deposit reaches $3bn – SUCH TV
The State Bank of Pakistan (SBP) has received $1 billion from the Ministry of Finance of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, marking the second tranche of a $3 billion deposit agreed recently, the central bank said on Tuesday.
According to the statement issued by the central bank, the second tranche was received with a value date of April 20, 2026.
The first tranche of $2 billion had already been received on April 15, 2026, bringing the total inflows under the arrangement to $3 billion.
The development comes days after Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif’s visit to Saudi Arabia, where he engaged in diplomatic efforts aimed at promoting regional peace.
During his visit, the premier met Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman in Jeddah and expressed appreciation for the Kingdom’s continued support for Pakistan’s economic stability. He also conveyed solidarity with Saudi Arabia in light of recent regional developments.
Earlier on April 16, Finance Minister Muhammad Aurangzeb had announced that Saudi Arabia would provide $3 billion in additional financial support, with disbursement expected shortly.
He also noted that Riyadh had extended the tenure of its existing $5 billion deposit, removing the earlier annual rollover requirement.
The Saudi funding has strengthened Pakistan’s external position as it repaid $2 billion in debt to the United Arab Emirates (UAE).
The amount was kept with the central banks as a safe deposit.
Saudi Arabia has been a key financial partner for Pakistan, having provided support packages during previous economic challenges, including a $6 billion assistance programme in 2018 comprising deposits and oil facility arrangements.
Business
Oil prices dip, most stocks rise on lingering Iran peace hopes | The Express Tribune
Crude plunged on Friday after Tehran said it would allow ships to transit the Strait of Hormuz
A map showing the Strait of Hormuz, also known as Madiq Hurmuz, and 3D printed oil barrels are seen in this illustration taken March 26, 2026. PHOTO: REUTERS
HONG KONG:
With the end of a two-week ceasefire approaching, the White House said Vice President JD Vance was ready to return to Pakistan for fresh negotiations to end a conflict that has sent crude soaring and revived inflation fears.
However, the Islamic Republic’s position remained uncertain as it accused Washington of violating their fragile truce through its blockade of the country’s ports and seizure of a ship.
Crude plunged on Friday after Tehran said it would allow ships to transit the Strait of Hormuz, which had been effectively closed since the war began on February 28.
Read: US positive on Iran deal but talks still uncertain as ceasefire end nears
But the commodity rebounded on Monday as Iran closed the waterway again, citing the blockade and seizure.
Donald Trump has similarly accused Tehran of violating the ceasefire by harassing vessels in the Strait of Hormuz, the transit passage for about one-fifth of global oil.
The US president said the blockade would not be lifted until an agreement had been reached.
“THE BLOCKADE, which we will not take off until there is a ‘DEAL,’ is absolutely destroying Iran,” Trump said on social media. “They are losing $500 Million Dollars a day, an unsustainable number, even in the short run.”
He told PBS News that Iran was “supposed to be there” at the talks in Pakistan.
“We agreed to be there,” he said, warning that if the ceasefire expired “then lots of bombs start going off”.
He separately told Bloomberg News it was “highly unlikely” he would extend the truce.
Based on its start time, the truce theoretically expires overnight on Tuesday, Iran time, although in his comments to Bloomberg Trump said the end was Wednesday evening Washington time.
The Middle Eastern country’s parliament speaker, Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf, said “Trump wants to turn this negotiating table into a surrender table or justify renewed hostilities, as he sees fit”.
“We do not accept negotiations under the shadow of threats, and in the last two weeks we have been preparing to show new cards on the battlefield,” he wrote on X.
Still, investors remained largely upbeat that the two sides will eventually come to a deal that will reopen the strategic strait.
US benchmark crude West Texas Intermediate rose more than 1%, while Brent was also higher.
Tech rally
Seoul led the equity market gains thanks to a resumption of the tech rally that had pushed the Kospi to multiple records before the war, while Tokyo and Taipei were also well up.
Hong Kong, Singapore and Manila also advanced, although Shanghai and Sydney fluctuated.
That came even after a down day on Wall Street, where the S&P 500 and Nasdaq Composite retreated from Friday’s record closes.
Asia had opened “with a gentle lean into risk as signs Iran may join talks with the US offer a pathway, however narrow, toward easing tensions ahead of the ceasefire deadline”, wrote SPI Asset Management’s Stephen Innes.
“Markets are pricing the possibility of progress rather than its certainty,” he said.
“Trump’s remark that a ceasefire extension is ‘highly unlikely’ if no deal is reached has effectively put a clock on the market.
“However, traders recognise the playbook. Hard deadlines and firm rhetoric often soften as negotiations evolve, but the presence of a timeline still sharpens positioning and raises the stakes around each headline.”
In company news, Japanese arms firms enjoyed healthy buying after Tokyo said on Tuesday it would ease decades-old export rules, paving the way for the sale of lethal weapons overseas.
The policy shift, which ends Tokyo’s self-imposed restraint on the sale of lethal arms, comes as it seeks to enter the international arms market, hoping to bolster national defence as well as boost economic growth.
Fujitsu climbed 2.4%, NEC added 3.7%, and Mitsubishi Electric was up 0.9%, while Mitsubishi Heavy gained 0.4%.
Key figures around 0230 GMT
West Texas Intermediate: DOWN 1.2% at $88.50 a barrel
Brent North Sea Crude: DOWN 0.4% at $95.12 a barrel
Tokyo – Nikkei 225: UP 1.3% at 59,596.10 (break)
Hong Kong – Hang Seng Index: UP 0.3% at 26,427.75
Shanghai – Composite: DOWN 0.2% at 4,073.82
Euro/dollar: DOWN at $1.1780 from $1.1786 on Monday
Pound/dollar: DOWN at $1.3525 from $1.3535
Dollar/yen: UP at 158.98 yen from 158.88 yen
Euro/pound: UP at 87.10 pence from 87.07 pence
New York – Dow Jones: FLAT at 49,442.56 (close)
London – FTSE 100: DOWN 0.6% at 10,609.08 (close)
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