Aurangzeb sees budget upside from US-Iran deal, but says 'way too premature' to revise projections

Published June 16, 2026 Updated June 16, 2026 09:25am
Finance Minister Muhammad Aurangzeb speaks during a Reuters interview in Islamabad, Pakistan, June 15, 2026. — Reuters
Finance Minister Muhammad Aurangzeb speaks during a Reuters interview in Islamabad, Pakistan, June 15, 2026. — Reuters
Finance Minister Muhammad Aurangzeb speaks during an interview at the International Monetary Fund and World Bank Group's annual spring meetings in Washington DC, US on April 13, 2026. — Reuters/File
Finance Minister Muhammad Aurangzeb speaks during an interview at the International Monetary Fund and World Bank Group's annual spring meetings in Washington DC, US on April 13, 2026. — Reuters/File

Pakistan could improve economic projections for 2027 after the end of the Iran war, but it is still too early to revise the budget, Finance Minister Muhammad Aurangzeb told Reuters, hours after the US and Iran signed a deal to end the fighting.

Damaged energy infrastructure meant supply chains would take time to return to normal, after the conflict pushed inflation back into double digits, Aurangzeb said.

“We were looking at how we manage the second, third-order impact in case this conflict continues,” he said. “The energy infrastructure has been hit. And therefore, it will take time before we return to normalcy in terms of supply chains.”

He added, “I do see upsides in what we have projected for next year,” but cautioned it would be “way too premature” to revise the budget.

The budget for the upcoming financial year, presented in Parliament on Friday, targets growth of 4 per cent and inflation of 8.2pc.

It raised defence spending by 18pc to Rs3 trillion, while relying on higher tax revenue to keep a $7 billion International Monetary Fund (IMF) programme on track.

Commercial borrowing to change creditor profile

Islamabad may use commercial borrowing in fiscal year 2027 to change its creditor profile without increasing overall external debt, Aurangzeb added in comments on Monday.

“Ideally, what we want to do is to see if we can replace some of the bilateral through commercial,” he said. “We do not intend to increase the size of our external debt.”

Pakistan repaid $3.4 billion in bilateral deposits from the United Arab Emirates last month but has also tapped the emirates’ commercial banks for financing, reflecting the creditor-profile shift Aurangzeb wants to formalise.

It plans further Panda Bond, Eurobond, US dollar and first rupee-linked, dollar-settled issues, though the sizes have yet to be decided, he said.

The FY27 budget envisages $2.82bn in commercial and eurobond financing, while Pakistan has approval for $1bn equivalent in Panda bonds after a $250 million debut that was 95pc backed by the Asian Development Bank and the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank.

Interest has surged in Pakistan’s burgeoning defence industry after last year’s conflict with India, but Aurangzeb said it was too early to project any defence-export upside.

The government’s immediate focus is on allocations, given two “active” borders, he added, as the country is flanked by Afghanistan and India.

Pakistan has also moved to formalise the digital asset sector this year, for example by signing pacts with Binance and World Liberty Financial.

Aurangzeb said Pakistan would regulate crypto, tokenisation and digital-asset exchanges before taxing the sector, saying revenue gains would follow once it was formalised.

“Yes, at some point we have to bring it into the taxation timeframe,” he added. “But this was not the time to do it.”

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