If approved by Executive Board, Pakistan will have access to $1 billion under the EFF
Agencies
WASHINGTON/ISLAMABAD: The International Monetary Fund’s (IMF) Executive Board is scheduled to meet on May 9 to discuss the $1.3 billion staff-level agreement with Pakistan under its ongoing 37-month bailout programme.
The meeting, as per the statement issued by the IMF, will cater to Pakistan’s Extended Fund Facility (EFF), request for the modification of performance criteria, and request for an arrangement under the Resilience and Sustainability Facility (RSF).
The Washington-based lender and Islamabad reached an SLA and agreed on the first review of the $7 loan facility in March. The SLA, a 28-month deal, would support Pakistan’s efforts to mitigate and adapt to climate change, the IMF had said back then.
If approved by the IMF’s Executive Board, Pakistan will have access to approximately $1 billion under the EFF, bringing total disbursements under the programme to around $2 billion.
Ahead of the upcoming meeting, Finance Minister Muhammad Aurangzeb recently met IMF Managing Director Kristalina Georgieva on the sidelines of the WB/IMF Spring Meetings 2025 in Washington and reaffirmed the government’s commitment to reforms in key sectors.
Separately, the lender has downgraded Pakistan’s economic growth projection for the current fiscal year from 3% to 2.6% — the World Bank however projects 2.7% growth in the fiscal year ending June 2025.
In its, World Economic Outlook report, the IMF noted that the country’s GDP growth for the next fiscal year (2025–26) is projected to rise to 3.6%.
Inflation in Pakistan — which stood at 23.4% in 2024 — is forecast at 5.1% for the current fiscal year, with the IMF projecting it to rise further to 7.7% in the next fiscal year.
The IMF also revised its forecast for Pakistan’s current account deficit. It now expects the deficit to stand at 0.1% of GDP, compared to its earlier estimate of 1%.
In nominal terms, the current account gap is expected to be just $400 million, instead of the previously projected $3.7 billion.
For 2026, the lender expects the current account deficit to further increase to 0.4% of the GDP.
The unemployment rate is projected to remain at 8% in 2025 — down from 8.3% in 2024 — with a further expected decrease to 7.5% in 2026, according to the report.