IMF begins talks in Islamabad on Pakistan’s climate financing request
A technical delegation from the International Monetary Fund is scheduled to commence discussions in Islamabad regarding Pakistan’s appeal for over $1 billion in additional funding aimed at enhancing climate resilience on Monday (today).
A policy review would take place early next week to evaluate the government’s performance under the existing $7 billion Extended Fund Facility (EFF), following the initial talks. The government is expecting to receive between $1 billion and $1.5 billion.
Sources told Aaj News that talks would also cover topics such as the carbon levy, electric vehicles, and subsidies. Such discussions are part of broader efforts to align Pakistan’s economic policies with international standards and address climate change challenges.
Last week, Finance Minister Muhammad Aurangzeb said that the IMF has expressed its willingness to provide additional funding, contingent on the implementation of tax reforms.
“It is necessary to bring reforms in the tax system. The people do not believe in the tax authority,” he said while addressing industrialists at the Faisalabad Chamber of Commerce and Industry on Saturday.
The finance minister acknowledged the “significant burden” on salaried individuals and stated that they will be required to submit their tax forms. “By November, employees from seven sectors will be able to file their forms online.”
Earlier this month, sources told Aaj News that a technical delegation from the IMF has called for “stricter monitoring” of Pakistan’s public finance management, governance, and budget utilisation, emphasising the need for greater transparency and modern oversight mechanisms.
The IMF team has planned to engage primarily with several key ministries, including those of planning, finance, climate change, petroleum, and water resources. They would also collaborate with the Federal Board of Revenue, disaster management agencies, and provincial governments.
Mahir Binici, the IMF’s resident representative in Islamabad, has confirmed that such engagements would continue over the next three weeks.
An IMF staff team is expected to arrive in Pakistan between early and mid-March to conduct discussions for the first review of the country’s EFF programme. The talks would also address the South Asian country’s request for support under the Resilience and Sustainability Facility (RSF). In preparation, a technical team would be in Pakistan starting in late February to tackle technical matters concerning the potential RSF arrangement.
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IMF technical team urges strict oversight on budget utilisation and governance
Pakistan has one remaining benchmark related to the necessary amendments to the Sovereign Wealth Fund, which are due by the end of December. But other governance and financial safeguard conditions have already been satisfied.
In the recent past, the planning ministry has updated all stakeholders, including federal ministries and provincial governments, regarding the criteria and methodology for selecting projects in the upcoming Public Sector Development Programme.
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