As flames of conflict lick across the Middle East—sparked by Iran-Israel-US hostilities—Pakistan finds itself economically besieged. Bound by pacts with Saudi Arabia, Islamabad navigates a geopolitical minefield while its domestic battles in Afghanistan and against TTP and BLA militants exacerbate the strain. The timing couldn’t be worse for a nation already on IMF life support.
Military engagements are not just battlefield burdens; they’re fiscal black holes sucking dry Pakistan’s meager resources. With every skirmish, economic recovery slips further away, forcing the government into a barrage of belt-tightening edicts that signal deep distress.
Central directive: Slash official vehicle usage by 60%. Elite bureaucrats earning above 300,000 rupees are asked to donate two days’ pay voluntarily, sparing health and education workers. Elected representatives face 25% pay and perk cuts for two months. Fuel for state fleets drops 50%, and top officials—ministers, advisors, aides—waive salaries entirely during this period.
Across the board, discretionary expenses shrink by 20%. Luxury travel ends; economy class only, and only for must-do foreign trips. Office procurement freezes on durables, IT gets a tight leash post-review. Virtual meetings replace in-person ones to economize on logistics.
No new cars until mid-2026. Four-day workweeks for most offices, exemptions for finance and critical ops. Events like workshops and summits need green lights first. Private firms get a nudge to follow suit.
Analysts paint a grim picture: Debt overload meets endless crisis. Extended Middle East strife renders austerity futile, risking total economic implosion. Eid shopping frenzy? Forgotten amid cautionary spending. The March 6 fuel surge—20% up to fight stockpiling—has instead ravaged farms, spiked commute fares, and grounded delivery services, fueling widespread resentment.