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2.7% growth or 100% denial? How Pakistan's economic survey tries to spin crisis as comeback

Pakistan's Economic Survey 2024-25 reads less like a hard-nosed analysis and more like a desperate attempt to whitewash chronic failures.

June 09, 2025 / 16:28 IST
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A ragpicker searches for recyclable materials in Rawalpindi on May 17, 2022. (Photo by Farooq NAEEM / AFP)

As Pakistan prepares to unveil its annual budget on Tuesday (June 10), the Shehbaz Sharif-led government, through its finance minister Muhammad Aurangzeb, on Monday released the country’s economic survey 2024-25.

Traditionally, the economic survey is meant to offer a transparent snapshot of the country’s economic performance. But like much else in Pakistan’s civil-military-dominated system, this year’s survey reads less like a hard-nosed analysis and more like a desperate attempt to whitewash chronic failures.

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At the centre of this carefully worded report is a deceptively optimistic 2.7% GDP growth figure — a number that, while better than last year’s negative growth, still paints a grim picture for a country of over 240 million people facing deep structural distress.

Aurangzeb stated that Pakistan’s GDP contracted by 0.2% in 2023, but rebounded to 2.5% in 2024. “For 2025, we have projected a growth of 2.7%,” he said, adding that the country is on a gradual path to recovery and the focus must remain on achieving sustainable growth.