HomeWorldIMF sounds alarm on Pakistan’s systemic corruption: Why bailouts continue despite growing security risks for India

IMF sounds alarm on Pakistan’s systemic corruption: Why bailouts continue despite growing security risks for India

Beyond governance, India has repeatedly warned that IMF funds indirectly enable Pakistan’s security establishment, which continues to patronise terror groups targeting Indian territory.

November 24, 2025 / 19:13 IST
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People walk through a market selling Pakistan's national flags and other accessories in Karachi on August 12, 2025, ahead of the country's Independence Day celebrations. (Photo by Rizwan TABASSUM / AFP)
People walk through a market selling Pakistan's national flags and other accessories in Karachi on August 12, 2025, ahead of the country's Independence Day celebrations. (Photo by Rizwan TABASSUM / AFP)

Pakistan has received one of its harshest assessments yet from the International Monetary Fund. In its Governance and Corruption Diagnostic Report, the IMF describes corruption as “persistent and corrosive” and says it has become embedded in the country’s political and economic system.

The report portrays a state riddled with elite capture, opaque decision-making and weak institutions that no longer serve the public interest. Instead, power and resources remain concentrated in the hands of a narrow political and military elite.

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The IMF warns that corruption distorts markets, discourages investment and weakens government capacity. Pakistan’s record on controlling graft places it among the worst global performers. Between January 2023 and December 2024 alone, corruption-related recoveries stood at Rs 5.3 trillion, but the Fund stresses this is only a “narrow slice” of the real damage.

Institutions seen as compromised