
ISLAMABAD: Remittances from overseas Pakistanis reached a record $38.3 billion in FY25, rising more than 26 percent from the previous year, according to the State Bank of Pakistan. While these inflows have bolstered foreign exchange reserves and household consumption, experts warn that excessive dependence on remittances poses long-term economic and social risks.
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Remittances now surpass merchandise exports, which grew modestly to around $32.3 billion in FY25, highlighting a structural imbalance in Pakistan’s growth model. Economists note that these inflows primarily support consumption rather than investment, reducing incentives for industrial development, export diversification, and productivity-enhancing reforms. Persistent reliance on remittances can also sustain an overvalued real exchange rate, weakening the competitiveness of domestic producers and widening the trade gap.
The social and demographic impacts are also significant. Prolonged overseas employment often strains family structures, affecting children and spouses left behind. In communities highly dependent on remittances, youth may prioritise migration over local skill development and entrepreneurship, further weakening domestic economic ecosystems. Geographical concentration of remittance recipients can also exacerbate socio-economic inequalities.
Remittances have political implications as well. Households able to access services privately reduce pressure on the government to improve public service delivery, potentially fostering policy complacency and limiting institutional reform. While these inflows provide short-term stability, they risk becoming a structural crutch if not channelled into productive investment.
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Analysts stress that the value of remittances remains immense, reflecting the sacrifices of millions abroad. However, for sustainable growth, Pakistan must use these inflows strategically — as a bridge toward a productivity-driven economy rather than as a substitute for domestic economic resilience. Without deliberate policies to revive exports and encourage investment, reliance on remittances could entrench structural fragility and limit the country’s long-term development trajectory.