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IMF executive board clears $1.2b amid Pakistan’s reform commitments | The Express Tribune
Aurangzeb assures IMF Pakistan remains committed to sound policies, reforms for sustainable growth
The International Monetary Fund logo is seen during the IMF/World Bank spring meetings in Washington, U.S., April 21, 2017. REUTERS
The executive board of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) on Friday approved $1.2 billion worth of loan tranches after Pakistan accepted a dozen new conditions and assured it would stick to the pre-war programme targets to stay on the course of stabilization.
With the fresh approval, Pakistan has so far received a $4.5 billion loan from the IMF against two separate debt packages totaling $8.4 billion. Pakistan has access to another $1 billion under the Extended Fund Facility and $200 million under the Resilience and Sustainability Facility.
The money would be disbursed early next week, which will take the central bank’s reserves to over $17 billion, said government officials.
Read: Pakistan assures IMF to withdraw untargeted power subsidies in January
However, the government had to stick to the old fiscal and monetary targets and gave a commitment to stay on the path of stabilization despite strong voices against these policies that have caused higher unemployment, higher poverty, and higher income inequality.
The IMF executive board also approved a modification of one end-June performance criterion, specifically the floor on net international reserves of the SBP. It also set new performance criteria for end-December 2026 and end-June 2027 for the central bank. The $1 billion debt would be used for balance of payment support, while the $200 million is given in budget support, according to government officials.
The IMF approval came after the government showed better performance against the fiscal and monetary targets, but there were divergent views about the path during the second half of this fiscal year.
The IMF mission had reviewed the performance of Pakistan’s economy for the July-December 2025 period, covering the third review of the $7 billion bailout package.
Pakistan met all end-December 2025 quantitative performance criteria and also outperformed against the floor on net international reserves and comfortably met the general government’s primary balance target.
Also Read: Pakistan set for $200m IMF resilience fund
The government also met six of eight end-of-December 2025 indicative targets, but the Federal Board of Revenue remained the weakest link. It missed the targets on net tax revenues collected by the FBR and income tax revenues from retailers, which fell short of IMF targets.
However, the government assured the IMF that it would remain focused on implementing revenue administration reforms to minimize the shortfall by the end of the fiscal year. To offset the impact of the revenue shortfall on the IMF target, the government has increased petroleum levy rates.
The government also made some progress on structural reforms and met four structural benchmarks in the areas of governance, social support, gas sector sustainability, and special technology zones on time.
As part of the conditions under the $1.2 billion climate facility, the government adopted a green taxonomy and issued guidelines on the management of climate-related financial risks and on listed companies’ disclosure of climate-related risks and opportunities.
Finance Minister Muhammad Aurangzeb assured the IMF that the country remains committed to continuing with sound and prudent macroeconomic policies and structural and institutional reforms to place Pakistan on a path toward long-term sustainable and inclusive growth.
The fresh assurances have also been given to provide the foundation to withstand shocks, including the impact of the Middle East war, said government officials.
Read More: IMF seeks removal of SWF powers
Pakistan has now assured the IMF that it would not abandon the fiscal path agreed before the start of the Middle East war and would deliver the Rs3.4 trillion primary budget surplus target. Enforcement measures would be fast-tracked to cover the revenue shortfall by the FBR.
According to another commitment, the new budget would be made in consultation with the IMF to ensure that it is a fiscally tight budget and that the government does not chase higher economic growth, said officials.
For the next fiscal year, the government has agreed to deliver a Rs2.84 trillion primary budget surplus target, which is equal to 2% of GDP.
Under the same plan, the State Bank of Pakistan has already increased interest rates to 11.5% and gave a commitment to further raise rates if inflation remains higher than the agreed limits, said sources.
Pakistan has also assured the IMF that it would regularly adjust electricity and gas prices to maintain a progressive tariff structure, shield the most vulnerable from large tariff increases, and continue cost-reducing reforms in the energy sector.
Overall, the government accepted nearly a dozen more conditions, including approval of the new budget by the National Assembly in line with the Fund’s agreement and the amendment of laws governing special economic and technology zones.
The government has committed to the IMF that the Parliament would approve the fiscal year 2026-27 budget in line with the IMF staff agreement on the $7 billion programme targets. This is the second time the government has accepted such a condition under the current programme, as the last budget was also approved under IMF instructions.
Read: IMF okays 60% cut in gas levy
The total number of conditions that the IMF has so far imposed during the past less than two years has touched 75. These encompass all spheres of economic decision-making, governance, and private sector development.
The sources said that Pakistan has accepted the IMF condition that by June 2027, it will enact amendments to the Special Economic Zones (SEZ) Act and Special Technology Zones Authority Act (STZA) to phase out existing fiscal incentives and shift from profit-based to cost-based incentives.
The country would also amend these laws to withdraw the authority of the Board of Approvals, Board of Investment, and SEZ authorities in granting tax incentives. The legal changes would be made to the satisfaction of the IMF to completely phase out all existing fiscal incentives to STZs by 2035.
According to another commitment, the government would prohibit Export Processing Zones from selling their goods in the domestic market. The restriction on local sales will be implemented by September this year, said sources.
The industries located in these export zones are often accused of selling a significant chunk of their production in the local market to evade taxes.
Business
UK drivers could be denied car finance compensation as firms lodge legal battle
Millions of car finance payouts are in jeopardy after the UK’s financial watchdog indicated its compensation scheme faces significant delays, changes, or even collapse.
This uncertainty stems from four legal challenges against the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA).
The FCA has advised motor finance firms to prepare for the possibility that its redress scheme, which could see an average payout of £829, may not proceed.
The regulator stated that while a hearing date is unclear, these cases are unlikely to be heard before October.
In the meantime, it is in discussions about the “possibility of suspending some elements” of its compensation scheme, while still urging lenders to prepare for payouts.
But the regulator said it was also considering its options should parts of the scheme be quashed by the courts, including proceeding with a revised version or asking lenders to plan for a scenario where “there would be no scheme”.
This could mean lenders need to be ready to respond to complaints from car finance customers individually, rather than under the rules of an industry-wide programme set by the FCA.
“Many people will be frustrated that the legal action will delay payouts due to begin this year,” the FCA said.
“We remain committed to ensuring consumers receive any compensation owed as promptly as possible.”
The FCA set out the final details of its compensation scheme in March, which it estimated could cost the industry about £9.1 billion in total.
It had been expecting millions of claims to be paid out this year and the vast majority settled by the end of 2027.
The financial services arms of carmakers Volkswagen and Mercedes-Benz and the car finance arm of French bank Credit Agricole, as well as Consumer Voice, a group representing consumers, are asking the courts to quash the scheme, arguing the rules are unlawful.
“Between the four separate legal challenges, it is claimed in effect that the FCA’s approach to establishing the schemes has been both unduly favourable to consumers and unduly favourable to lenders,” the watchdog said.
At least one claim alleges that the FCA has breached the rights of lenders under the 1998 Human Rights Act, according to the watchdog.
Despite the uncertainty of the legal cases, the watchdog is still advising consumers to complain directly to their lender if they think they might be owed compensation, which they can do for free using a template letter on its website.
Business
Us Job Growth Data 2026: US adds stronger-than-expected 115,000 jobs in April despite Iran war impact – The Times of India
America’s employers added a stronger-than-expected 115,000 jobs in April despite economic uncertainty triggered by the Iran war, according to data released by the US labor department on Friday.The unemployment rate remained unchanged at 4.3 per cent, while hiring beat economists’ expectations of 65,000 new jobs, although it slowed from the revised 185,000 jobs added in March.The latest data suggests the US labour market has remained resilient even as the conflict in West Asia disrupted global oil supplies and pushed average US gasoline prices above $4.50 a gallon this week.“The labor market is not booming, but it is proving harder to break than many feared,” Olu Sonola, head of US economics at Fitch Ratings, said, as quoted by news agency AP.
Healthcare, transport sectors lead hiring
Healthcare companies added 37,000 jobs in April, while transportation and warehousing firms added 30,000 positions, according to the report.However, manufacturers cut 2,000 jobs during the month and have shed 66,000 jobs over the past year despite President Donald Trump’s protectionist trade policies aimed at boosting factory employment.Average hourly earnings rose 0.2 per cent from March and 3.6 per cent year-on-year, broadly aligning with the Federal Reserve’s inflation target.The labour force participation rate fell to 61.8 per cent, its lowest level since October 2021, as retirements and tighter immigration policies reduced the number of people seeking work.
Iran war and inflation concerns remain
Economists said the economy has so far weathered the impact of the Iran conflict better than expected, although risks remain if high energy prices persist.“Businesses to some extent are viewing the conflict in Iran as temporary,” Gus Faucher, chief economist at PNC, told AP. “We continue to see solid growth in consumer spending. And we’re seeing strong business investment, particularly around tech and AI.”However, Faucher warned that “the longer conflict in Iran lasts, the higher energy prices go, the longer they stay elevated the greater the drag on the economy.”The Iran war sharply disrupted shipping through the Strait of Hormuz after Iran closed the crucial route following US-Israeli strikes on February 28. The move caused oil prices to surge and raised fears of slower global economic growth.
Fed likely to hold rates steady
The stronger-than-expected jobs report is also expected to reduce pressure on the Federal Reserve to cut interest rates soon.Inflation climbed to 3.3 per cent in March, its highest level in two years, driven largely by rising fuel prices.Friday’s employment data “actually makes it less likely that we see a rate cut anytime soon,” Faucher said, adding that the Fed may prefer to focus on bringing inflation back towards its 2 per cent target before easing borrowing costs.
Business
US jobs data beats expectations for second month in a row
The solid figures came despite rising gas prices and economic uncertainty sparked by the Iran war.
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