How lender’s curbs redefine province-Centre fiscal relationship

Published June 20, 2026 Updated June 20, 2026 05:08am
In this file photo, a man is counting Pakistani currency. — Reuters/File
In this file photo, a man is counting Pakistani currency. — Reuters/File

IMAGINE a large joint family living under one roof, with the federal government as the head of the household and primary breadwinner. The four provinces are the adult children who live in the same house but manage their own rooms and budgets.

Under the NFC Award, the head of the household transfers roughly 60 per cent of the family’s income to the children to run their rooms, covering expenses such as education, health and development. The Centre retains the remaining 40pc. However, it is perpetually short of cash because the share is insufficient to service its debts while also paying for defence.

Enter the IMF in the role of an exacting bank manager. It extends loans to plug the deficit but keeps a close eye on the family’s books. One of its long-standing conditions is that the children collectively save a substantial portion of their allowance and post a surplus.

This year, however, the provinces face an additional requirement: a Rs1.04 trillion transfer to the Centre under Article 164 of the Constitution. This is not the same as a surplus. In a surplus, the adult children still own the money; they simply do not spend all of it, so that the overall household finances appear healthier to the bank. Thus, Punjab’s Rs910bn surplus and Balochistan’s Rs46bn surplus remain on provincial books and are not handed over to Islamabad to finance federal spending.

A clawback is different. Here, the provinces no longer own the money. It is transferred back to the Centre, which can then use it for its own purposes — defence, debt servicing and as a buffer against external shocks such as the Gulf conflict. Defence spending alone has risen 17pc to Rs3tr in the federal budget 2026-27. Punjab will contribute Rs535.5bn, Sindh Rs254bn, KP Rs151bn and Balochistan Rs94bn. In effect, the adult children are left with less money to spend on the citizens living in their rooms.

Notably, the provinces are free to present either a deficit or surplus budget when they place their finances before their respective assemblies. However, under the fiscal pact signed with the IMF as part of the federal government’s loan programme, they have committed to delivering an agreed surplus to support the consolidated fiscal position each year. That is why Sindh’s budget shows a deficit of Rs37bn and KP’s a deficit of Rs48bn, even as both remain bound by the broader surplus targets agreed with the Centre and the IMF.

This brings us back to the joint family. The children may run their own rooms and keep their own accounts, but when the bank manager reviews the household finances, it is the family’s combined balance sheet that ultimately matters.

Published in Dawn, June 20th, 2026

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