According to The Express Tribune report, citing fiscal operations summary released by the Ministry of Finance, the provinces fell short of saving the targeted PKR 1.2 trillion in the last fiscal year, which ended in June, due to a rise in expenditures.
The Federal Board of Revenue (FBR) fell short of meeting two major targets last fiscal year: collecting PKR 12.3 trillion in total revenues and raising PKR 50 billion from retailers under the Tajir Dost Scheme.
Despite these shortfalls, Pakistan achieved a
This marks the second consecutive year of a primary surplus and the highest recorded in 24 years, exceeding the target set by the IMF, added the report.
According to the report, the finance ministry tried hard to stay on the fiscal path, but the setback came from the provincial capitals, which were not under the control of the federal government.
The overall fiscal
IMF conditions
The $7 billion IMF bailout package comes with around 50 conditions, some of which are reviewed quarterly and annually, and are directly tied to the disbursement of loan tranches.
While the government has achieved a degree of fiscal stability, official data reveals that net
Despite these challenges, the federal government exceeded its primary surplus target, reporting a surplus of PKR 2.7 trillion—equivalent to 2.4% of GDP—surpassing the IMF’s benchmark, according to the Finance Ministry.
The provincial governments had given the understanding to the IMF and the
The FBR failed to collect any significant revenue under the Tajir Dost Scheme against the target of PKR 50 billion for the last fiscal year.
Despite these shortfalls, the government is unlikely to face serious hurdles during the upcoming review talks — expected to begin next month — for the release of the next $1 billion tranche, due to
The $7 billion package was agreed last year, and it has been instrumental in stabilising the economy of the country.
With inputs from agencies