Denemek ALTIN - Özgür
Pakistan's economy must escape the clutches of its armed forces
Mint Mumbai
|June 18, 2025
The country must abandon its anti-India doctrine for any chance of success in the economic arena
We'll eat grass but will get our own bomb." This vow made by Pakistani Prime Minister Zulfikar Ali Bhutto wasn't just rhetoric; it became his nation's strategy. Five decades later, Pakistan spends skewed sums on its armed forces, while its formal economy stagnates at a low proportion of its GDP. With a burgeoning defence budget, its anti-India doctrine is self-defeating.
In 2025-26, India's allocation for defence is 6.8 trillion (about $79 billion) or about 1.9% of GDP; Pakistan's budget for 2025-26 has upped its core defence outlay by 20% to about $9 billion while cutting overall expenditure; with its military pensions taken into account, its total spending would be nearly $12 billion, which is well above 3% of its GDP. Islamabad's defence bill sucks in revenue and weakens its credit profile; half its external borrowings over the last decade serviced either past bailouts or military imports. This strategy, coupled with politically 'untouchable' energy subsidies and a minuscule tax base, creates conundrums for Pakistan.
Its debt spiral combines with currency depreciation to lower the efficacy of every successive bailout, even as rising energy costs hold its industries back. The military's dominance of fiscal policy ensures that the bulk of its population lives in penury, while the army enjoys comfort and control.
Bu hikaye Mint Mumbai dergisinin June 18, 2025 baskısından alınmıştır.
Binlerce özenle seçilmiş premium hikayeye ve 9.000'den fazla dergi ve gazeteye erişmek için Magzter GOLD'a abone olun.
Zaten abone misiniz? Oturum aç
Mint Mumbai'den DAHA FAZLA HİKAYE
Mint Mumbai
Centre rejigs RoC framework to make it friendlier, efficient
The ministry of corporate affairs has passed orders to roll out a revamped compliance and oversight system for companies and LLPs starting 1 January 2026-the biggest administrative shakeup in years aimed at improving both ease of doing business as well as regulatory efficiency, a person with direct knowledge of the decision said.
2 mins
November 06, 2025
Mint Mumbai
First, do no harm
India's government has put together governance guidelines for artificial intelligence (AI), a \"framework to ensure safe, inclusive and responsible AI adoption across sectors.\"
1 min
November 06, 2025
Mint Mumbai
IndiGo to ease off aircraft lease model that made it airline No.1
IndiGo Airlines, India's largest carrier, is steadily shifting to owning and financially leasing commercial jets in place of its earlier successful strategy of selling and leasing back planes, its chief executive said.
2 mins
November 06, 2025
Mint Mumbai
Large clients keep Indian IT afloat amid Al uncertainties
Large clients helped soften the blow from an artificial intelligence (AI)-powered upheaval for at least three of India's top five software services providers this year so far.
2 mins
November 06, 2025
Mint Mumbai
WILL FLIPKART'S BET ON GEN Z FASHION PAY OFF?
The e-commerce giant has seen its market share in fashion wear contract amid the rise of rivals Meesho and Ajio
9 mins
November 06, 2025
Mint Mumbai
Putin warns Russia may start N-tests
President Vladimir Putin said Russia has no plans to violate existing agreements on nuclear testing, but signalled that he’s ready to order them if US President Donald Trump moves forward with threatened US atomic weapons trials.
1 min
November 06, 2025
Mint Mumbai
Importers dodge platinum duty
A few bullion dealers and jewellers are exploiting a loophole in an import rule to avoid duty on platinum, making a neat 4—4.5% running into tens of crores, according to a top executive from a bullion trade lobby.
2 mins
November 06, 2025
Mint Mumbai
Diageo's India arm to review investment in RCB team owner
Diageo’s India arm will begin a strategic review of its investment in a unit which owns the Indian Premier League cricket team ‘Royal Challengers Bengaluru’ (RCB), the spirits maker said on Wednesday as it focuses on its core alcohol business.
1 min
November 06, 2025
Mint Mumbai
IndiGo preps for long haul even as rupee decline drags Q2
Interglobe Aviation Ltd’s (IndiGo) September quarter (Q2FY26) revenue grew 9% year-on-year, aided by optimized capacity addition, more passengers, and a better yield (a pricing metric).
1 mins
November 06, 2025
Mint Mumbai
Wall Street must work with a mayor it couldn't stop
Wall Street heavy weights failed to stop New York City voters from electing a democratic socialist mayor. Now what?
4 mins
November 06, 2025
Listen
Translate
Change font size
