Pakistan’s economy appears to be heading toward another challenging phase. The current account deficit has once again resurfaced amid persistent weaknesses in the external sector, particularly the balance of payments.
This vulnerability, which seems to be entrenched in the country’s structural imbalances, such as heavy reliance on imports, falling exports and exposure to external shocks, has long undermined Pakistan’s pursuit of sustainable growth.
While short-term economic stabilization measures have helped the country in recent months, they have not done much to address deeper issues that continue to constrain Pakistan’s economic potential.
Amid the war between the United States and Iran, Pakistan’s external sector has once again exposed the economy’s structural weaknesses. More importantly, the war and its economic fallout show that the problems that short-term economic fixes seemed to have addressed have resurfaced now. The country remains highly sensitive to geopolitical risks and changes in commodity prices. This U.S.-Iran conflict has already disrupted trade routes, raised energy costs, and put more pressure on foreign exchange reserves.
This is happening at a time when investor confidence in Pakistan is already low. Recent data from the State Bank of Pakistan (SBP) underscores the gravity of the situation. It is important to note that Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) in Pakistan has plummeted by a sharp 31 percent in the first 10 months of FY 2026. The country attracted just $1.409 billion during July-April FY26, compared to $2.035 billion in the same period of the previous fiscal year. Moreover, governance concerns and policy uncertainty, as per the central bank, continue to weigh heavily on foreign investor sentiment.
On a cumulative basis, total foreign investment for the 10 months stood at a meager $31.7 million, against $1.46 billion in the same period last year. This stark contrast highlights the cautious stance many international players have adopted toward Pakistan.
Likewise, inflows from other sources during the current financial year paint a similarly mixed picture. For instance, Hong Kong invested $281 million, while Switzerland and the United Arab Emirates followed with $170 million and $169 million, respectively.
Notably, Chinese investment in the Pakistani financial sector has bucked the downward trend. Its investments have offered Pakistan a critical buffer for external accounts. In April alone, inflows from China reached $61 million, exceeding the month’s total net FDI from all other countries. Moreover, over the 10 months, China accounted for more than half of all inflows, which stood at around $740 million. While this figure represents a decline from over $1 billion in the previous equivalent period, Chinese investment remains a vital source of capital for Pakistan at a time when many other investors have pulled back sharply.
Arguably, Beijing’s continued engagement with Pakistan’s financial sector provides not just funding but also a degree of stability in an otherwise volatile investment landscape. A positive development in this regard emerged earlier this month with Pakistan’s successful inaugural issue of Panda bonds in China’s domestic capital market. The country raised $250 million at a competitive 2.5 percent fixed rate of interest.
Khurram Schehzad, advisor to Pakistan’s Finance Minister, described the successful issuance at a very competitive rate as a testament to Pakistan’s improving macroeconomic fundamentals, external stability, disciplined fiscal management and sovereign repayment capacity.
“The success of the Panda bond [debut] sends a powerful signal to global investors that Pakistan’s economic recovery is gaining international recognition,” he noted.
From Pakistan’s perspective, this inaugural Panda Bond issuance represents an important step toward diversifying funding sources and deepening integration with Chinese financial markets. Moreover, it also signals Pakistan’s efforts to tap into alternative pools of capital beyond traditional Western or Gulf partners.
Meanwhile, foreign remittances have so far helped Pakistan avert a more acute financing and external account crisis. However, the idea of depending indefinitely on remittances to conceal structural weaknesses is neither viable nor an appropriate approach from a long-term resilience perspective.
Despite these positive developments amid a very difficult time, the broader picture linked to FDI remains one of caution and restraint. Seemingly, investors are wary of policy uncertainties, taxation complexities, currency volatility and other associated risks. This essentially means that winning back broader investor confidence will require deeper structural reforms aimed at improving the ease of doing business, addressing governance gaps, reforming taxation and crucially, shifting toward an export-led growth model that reduces dependence on imports.
Ultimately, for Pakistan, the path forward hinges on deep institutional reforms designed to reassure investors, even as they build domestic capacity. Without these fundamental changes, Pakistan’s economy risks remaining trapped in a chronic cycle of stabilization efforts followed by structural vulnerability, leaving it persistently exposed to geopolitical shocks, external account pressures and global uncertainties that will continue to test its resilience.

