City
Epaper

World Bank sees Pakistan's growth stuck near 3 per cent

By IANS | Updated: January 13, 2026 21:10 IST

Washington, Jan 13 Pakistan’s economy is expected to remain largely stagnant, with growth hovering around 3 per cent, ...

Open in App

Washington, Jan 13 Pakistan’s economy is expected to remain largely stagnant, with growth hovering around 3 per cent, as structural weaknesses and climate shocks continue to weigh on activity, the World Bank said on Tuesday.

The World Bank estimates Pakistan’s economy grew 3.0 per cent in FY2024-25 and projects growth to remain at 3.0 per cent in FY2025-26, before edging up modestly to 3.4 per cent in FY2026-27, according to its latest Global Economic Prospects report.

The report said recent growth was supported by stronger industrial activity. This followed a relaxation of import restrictions and an expansion of bank credit.

However, gains were offset by weaker agricultural output. The World Bank said farm production was dampened "partly due to a series of floods in 2025".

Pakistan is grouped within the Middle East, North Africa, Afghanistan, and Pakistan region, where overall growth is expected to strengthen. But the report said prospects vary widely across economies.

For Pakistan, the outlook remains constrained by structural challenges, climate risks and fiscal pressures.

The World Bank said recovery in agriculture and reconstruction following last year’s floods is expected to provide some support going forward. Even so, growth remains well below the levels needed to significantly raise incomes or absorb population growth.

The report warned that public debt levels across emerging and developing economies are at their highest in more than half a century, limiting governments’ ability to support growth.

"With public debt in emerging and developing economies at its highest level in more than half a century, restoring fiscal credibility has become an urgent priority," said M. Ayhan Kose, the World Bank Group’s Deputy Chief Economist.

He said fiscal rules can help stabilise debt and rebuild buffers, but stressed that outcomes depend on "credibility, enforcement, and political commitment".

Pakistan’s economy has faced repeated shocks in recent years, including floods, balance-of-payments pressures and policy instability, which have slowed investment and growth.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

NationalBihar: Revenue officer caught red-handed while taking bribe in Gopalganj

NationalGujarat CM reviews wildlife care centre as ‘Karuna Abhiyan’ intensifies

CricketWPL: Harmanpreet masterclass powers MI to 7-wicket win over GG

InternationalRubio, EAM Jaishankar talk nuclear law, trade, Indo-Pacific

Other SportsWPL 2026: Harmanpreet praises youngsters 'for taking responsibility' in dominant MI win

Business Realted Stories

BusinessHM Shah lays foundation stone for India's first state-run BSL-4 lab in Gandhinagar

BusinessMP Cabinet's decision to provide 50 pc rebate will give impetus to Gwalior Trade Fair: Jyotiraditya Scindia

BusinessTelangana achieves record paddy procurement of 70.82 lakh tonnes

Business"Important first step for realising millions of people's aspirations": CEA Nageswaran on financial inclusion initiatives

BusinessComposite salary account package for Central govt employees to be unveiled on Wed