Failure to publish the IMF report exposes Pakistan's governance gaps
Islamabad [Pakistan], September 17 (ANI): Pakistan has missed a crucial deadline to release the Governance and Corruption Diagnostic Report, a key requirement under the International Monetary Fund's (IMF) USD 7 billion bailout programme. The report, which includes recommendations to enhance judicial integrity, address conflicts of interest, and improve institutional performance, was supposed to be published by the end of July but remains pending, as reported by The Express Tribune.
Briefings presented to the finance minister revealed that while Pakistan has fulfilled most fiscal requirements, governance-related reforms, particularly in state-owned enterprises (SOEs) and judicial institutions, remain incomplete. The IMF only provided the draft governance report days before the deadline, making timely publication impossible.
The IMF's draft document reportedly contains nearly a dozen recommendations focusing on the rule of law, efficient contract enforcement, judicial transparency, and alternative dispute resolution. Suggestions include developing a multi-year judicial reform strategy, setting standardised criteria for judicial appointments, publishing judicial performance assessments, reducing case backlogs, and modernising contract and property laws.
The Federal Board of Revenue (FBR) also underperformed, collecting Rs 11.74 trillion against the target of Rs 12.3 trillion and failing to generate revenue under the Tajir Dost Scheme.
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