Pakistan’s public debt has witnessed a major spike, with fresh official data revealing a Rs9.3 trillion increase in FY25 averaging Rs25.4 billion per day. Finance Minister Muhammad Aurangzeb briefed the National Assembly that the country’s total public debt has now reached Rs80.5 trillion, highlighting rising fiscal pressures and a higher debt-to-GDP ratio.
Pakistan has struggled with heavy borrowing for years due to budget deficits, interest payments, and external financing needs. Fiscal tightening measures introduced during the IMF program aimed to stabilise the trajectory yet debt continues to expand.
In his written reply, Finance Minister Aurangzeb stated that under the FRDLA definition, the annual debt rise was Rs8.2 trillion, bringing the debt-to-GDP ratio to 70.8%.
He said:
“The government has achieved primary surpluses for two consecutive years and shifted towards longer-term borrowing to reduce rollover risks.”
Key measures highlighted:
State Bank numbers indicate a Rs1.283 trillion decline in central government debt in Q1 FY26, driven by strong SBP profit transfers worth Rs2.4 trillion last year.
Analysts called the Q1 improvement “a positive sign,” noting easing interest payment pressure and better debt management.
Planning Minister Ahsan Iqbal informed Parliament that:
Pakistan’s debt story reflects both ongoing risks and early signs of stabilisation largely dependent on fiscal discipline, growth recovery, and continued reforms.