Arab News
Arab News, Tue, Apr 15, 2025 | Shawwal 17, 1446
Pakistan remittances cross record $4 billion in March, Saudi Arabia remains top contributor
Saudi Arabia:
Pakistan’s central bank governor on Monday
said the current account would show a “substantial” surplus this year through
June mainly on the back of a record inflow of remittances which crossed the $4
billion mark in March, with Saudi Arabia once again topping the list of biggest
contributors.
Pakistan received a record-high $4.1 billion in
remittances in March 2025, which bodes well for the government’s efforts to
revive an economy that it expects will expand three percent this year, State
Bank of Pakistan (SBP) governor Jameel Ahmad said at an event at Pakistan Stock
Exchange in Karachi.
The central bank had earlier projected economic
growth to range from 2.5 percent to 3.5 percent.
“With this level of remittances, we are hoping
that for the current fiscal year our current account will stay in surplus,” the
governor said. “There will be a substantial surplus and this surplus is the best
performance, I will say, on the external account during the last two decades.”
The country broke its own record in February when
overseas Pakistanis remitted $3.1 billion.
Pakistan has faced a serious shortage of dollars
and had to restrict imports in 2023 to avoid an imminent default on its foreign
debts, which was avoided with the help of a last-gasp $3 billion financial
bailout from the International Monetary Fund (IMF).
Prime Minister’s Shehbaz Sharif’s government is
now waiting for the IMF’s executive board to approve the next $1 billion tranche
of a new program, approved in September last year, to boost foreign exchange
reserves that currently stand at $10.6 billion.
The current trend in the worker remittances
inflows, Ahmad said, had made the central bank revise its earlier projection of
$36 billion to $38 billion for this financial year. On the basis of such healthy
inflows, the country’s foreign exchange reserves were expected to surge beyond
$14 billion this year.
Ahmad said the country had paid most of its
external debt for FY25 and was expected to receive as much as $5 billion from
external sources by the end of June.
“I am quite confident that we will be receiving $4
to $5 billion before the end of June this year,” he said, without mentioning the
exact source of these funds.
Pakistan’s total debt liabilities this year
amounted to $26 billion of which $16 billion was supposed to be rolled over or
refinanced, the governor said. Of this, he said, $3.7 billion debt was
refinanced while close to $12.4 billion has been rolled over by friendly
countries including China, Saudi Arabia and the UAE.
Out of the remaining $10 billion debt, Pakistan
has already repaid $8 billion and was required to repay only $2 billion in the
remaining months of this year.
“We have been servicing all those debt obligations
on time,” said the SBP governor, adding that some inflows were delayed, but
these would also come before June 30.
Jameel said Pakistan’s current account was stable
and showed a $700 million surplus this year through February. Last year, the
country’s current account showed $1.7 billion, close to half percent of GDP.
“Good thing is that we have been able to achieve
this surplus despite substantial increase in imports,” he said, rejecting the
claims that the government was still restricting imports.
Pakistan was also spending around $5.7 billion
every month on oil and non-oil imports.
Due to the current account surplus and other
policy and regulatory measures like exchange companies’ reforms, the Pakistani
rupee had stabilized.
“The gap between the interbank market and the open
market is very narrow,” Ahmad said.
While the economy was expected to grow three
percent this year compared with 2.5 percent last year, agriculture was a major
drag on economic expansion this year and rose less than one percent during the
first six months through December.
Otherwise, he said, the economy was “doing well.”
“You can see the economic activity has already
picked up. This is reflected in our high frequency data. Look at cement sales,
look at auto sales, look at the high value textile exports,” Ahmad said.
While inflation was one of his biggest concerns
previously, the central bank governor said the pace of price hikes had slowed to
0.7 percent last month, the lowest level in six decades.
Consumer prices in Pakistan have been backbreaking
in recent years and rose 38 percent in May 2023. Pakistan’s central bank had to
halve its interest rate to 12 percent since June last year to tame inflation in
the country of more than 240 million people.
“From the current month onward, the inflation will
be rising and ultimately stabilize within the target range of 5 to 7 percent [in
the full year],” the central bank chief added.
Meanwhile, March 2025 data on remittances showed
remittances reached $ 4.1 billion last month, a record high. In terms of growth,
remittances increased by 37.3 percent and 29.8 percent on y/y and m/m basis,
respectively.
Cumulatively, with an inflow of $ 28.0 billion,
workers’ remittances increased by 33.2 percent during Jul-Mar FY25 compared to $
21.0 billion received during Jul-Mar FY24.
“Remittances inflows during March 2025 were mainly
sourced from Saudi Arabia ($987.3 million), United Arab Emirates ($842.1
million), United Kingdom ($683.9 million) and United States of America ($419.5
million),” the data showed.