• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer
Trending:
  • Kashmir
  • Elections
Friday, June 5, 2026

Daily Times

Your right to know

  • HOME
  • Latest
  • Iran-Israel war
  • Gilgit Baltistan Election
  • Pakistan
    • Balochistan
    • Gilgit Baltistan
    • Khyber Pakhtunkhwa
    • Punjab
    • Sindh
  • World
  • Editorials & Opinions
    • Editorials
    • Op-Eds
    • Commentary / Insight
    • Perspectives
    • Cartoons
    • Letters to the Editor
    • Featured
    • Blogs
      • Pakistan
      • World
      • Lifestyle
      • Culture
      • Sports
  • Business
  • Sports
  • E-PAPER
    • Lahore
    • Islamabad
    • Karachi
Qudrat Ullah

Qudrat Ullah

The writer is a Lahore based public policy analyst

Inclusive Punjab

Published on: March 16, 2026 8:55 AM

Punjab’s prosperity cannot be realized while parts of its population remain systematically excluded. Chief Minister Maryam Nawaz Sharif-led government appears to have internalised this foundational truth of developmental governance. Over the past two years, Punjab has architected one of the most expansive social protection frameworks, a constellation of targeted, data-driven programs designed to empower persons with disabilities, transgender individuals, women, religious minorities, children and the economically marginalised. Taken together, they represent a paradigm shift in how the state defines its obligations to its most vulnerable citizens.

The fiscal architecture underpinning this vision is formidable. Punjab’s Budget 2025-26, valued at a landmark Rs5.335 trillion, is the most ambitious people-focused fiscal plan in the province’s history, with 73% of total expenditure dedicated to public welfare and inclusive growth. The development budget alone has surged by 47.2%, now standing at a record Rs1,240 billion. This is not incremental reform but a structural reimagining of provincial governance.

At the centre of this human-centred agenda is the Himmat Card Programme. In the 2025-26 budget, the CM Himmat Card for Persons with Disabilities has been allocated Rs 4 billion, a significant scaling up from its pilot phase, which originally covered 40,000 individuals and has since expanded to nearly 65,000 beneficiaries. The quarterly stipend of Rs 10,500 offers something more profound than financial relief; it confers economic agency on a population historically condemned to dependency. For a person with a disability in rural Punjab, this card is not a handout but an architecture of dignity.

Complementing this is a large-scale Assistive Devices Distribution Programme, supported by over Rs1 billion, through which more than 17,000 registered individuals have received wheelchairs, hearing aids and artificial limbs. These are not acts of charity but investments in human capital, the language global development institutions have long championed. A child who receives a hearing aid attends class; a young man fitted with a prosthetic limb enters the workforce. The returns, both human and macroeconomic, are compounding and generational.

The government has also confronted the economic exclusion of transgender community with unusual directness. Vocational training under the Punjab Skills Development Fund now offers market-oriented certification and entrepreneurship support, creating viable pathways from marginalisation into the formal economy. In the lexicon of global equity frameworks, this is social inclusion in practice, not performative, but structural.

For women, particularly those in South Punjab, the provincial government has pursued a dual-track strategy that is both evidence-based and contextually intelligent. A Rs2 billion livestock distribution program is delivering productive assets to approximately 11,000 widows and divorced women, while thousands of rural women are being trained in digital entrepreneurship and freelancing, connecting them to the global gig economy. This convergence of traditional asset transfer with digital skilling is precisely the kind of policy innovation that development economists advocate: meeting beneficiaries where they are while equipping them for where the economy is heading.

The Punjab government has set aside a Rs70 billion social protection package, within which the Maryam Nawaz Social Security Rashan Card alone carries an allocation of Rs40 billion, a direct lifeline for food-insecure households battling inflationary pressures. The welfare architecture extends further: the Dhee Rani Programme supports low-income families at the time of daughters’ weddings, alleviating a burden that has historically pushed Pakistani families into predatory debt cycles. The Apni Chhat Apna Ghar housing scheme has received Rs150 billion, making homeownership a realistic aspiration for low-income families rather than a distant privilege. A Minority Card Programme ensures that religious minorities are not administratively invisible. Targeted investment in children’s cardiac surgeries and mobile medical units in underserved districts extends the protective apparatus of the state to those geographically and economically furthest from its centres of power.

The education sector has received Rs101 billion, health over Rs72 billion, and social welfare Rs44.2 billion in new allocations for FY2025-26. A zero new taxes policy reflects acute sensitivity to inflationary pressures on households, even as the government expands its revenue base through digitalisation and compliance reform.

Undergirding these programs is a push for institutional deepening. The establishment of District Welfare and Rehabilitation Units decentralises service delivery, closing the implementation gap between policy announcements in Lahore and lived realities in remote tehsils. Renewed enforcement of employment quotas for persons with disabilities seeks to embed inclusion not merely in welfare transfers but within the labour market itself, a shift from remediation to prevention.

What Chief Minister Maryam Nawaz Sharif’s government has produced is not a patchwork of electoral concessions but a credible, financed and institutionally grounded first draft of a genuinely inclusive social contract. The vision is coherent, the financial commitment is unprecedented and the policy architecture is more sophisticated than anything Punjab has previously attempted. Whether it endures will depend on rigorous monitoring, transparent implementation and the political discipline to course-correct when delivery falls short. Inclusion is not a destination policy reached in a single term; it is a direction that must be held to, year after year, with accountability to the people it serves.

The writer is a Lahore-based public policy analyst and can be reached at [email protected]

Filed Under: Pakistan Tagged With: Inclusive, Punjab

Submit a Comment




Primary Sidebar




Latest News

Satirical ‘Cockroach Party’ plans protest in New Delhi

Naqvi urges joint SCO action against regional security threats

Traditional Turkish coffee seller becomes a tourist attraction in Istanbul

UP madrasa demolished amid renewed scrutiny of Muslim institutions

AJK sets July 27 date for general elections

Pakistan

Naqvi urges joint SCO action against regional security threats

AJK sets July 27 date for general elections

Two sons of tribal leader killed in Waziristan shooting

President, Prime Minister praise forces after anti-terror operations in KP

Gilgit-Baltistan election campaign reaches final stretch

More Posts from this Category

Business

Weekly inflation eases as prices of some essentials decline

Federal budget proposes funding for Karachi development projects

Gold prices recorded a modest decline across Pakistan

Oil falls on hopes of broader peace after Lebanon, Israel halt fighting

Meat exports grow by 4.16%

More Posts from this Category

World

Satirical ‘Cockroach Party’ plans protest in New Delhi

Traditional Turkish coffee seller becomes a tourist attraction in Istanbul

UP madrasa demolished amid renewed scrutiny of Muslim institutions

More Posts from this Category




Footer

Home
Lead Stories
Latest News
Editor’s Picks

Culture
Life & Style
Featured
Videos

Editorials
OP-EDS
Commentary
Advertise

Cartoons
Letters
Blogs
Privacy Policy

Contact
Company’s Financials
Investor Information
Terms & Conditions

Facebook
Twitter
Instagram
Youtube

© 2026 Daily Times. All rights reserved.

Manage Consent
To provide the best experiences, we use technologies like cookies to store and/or access device information. Consenting to these technologies will allow us to process data such as browsing behavior or unique IDs on this site. Not consenting or withdrawing consent, may adversely affect certain features and functions.
Functional Always active
The technical storage or access is strictly necessary for the legitimate purpose of enabling the use of a specific service explicitly requested by the subscriber or user, or for the sole purpose of carrying out the transmission of a communication over an electronic communications network.
Preferences
The technical storage or access is necessary for the legitimate purpose of storing preferences that are not requested by the subscriber or user.
Statistics
The technical storage or access that is used exclusively for statistical purposes. The technical storage or access that is used exclusively for anonymous statistical purposes. Without a subpoena, voluntary compliance on the part of your Internet Service Provider, or additional records from a third party, information stored or retrieved for this purpose alone cannot usually be used to identify you.
Marketing
The technical storage or access is required to create user profiles to send advertising, or to track the user on a website or across several websites for similar marketing purposes.
  • Manage options
  • Manage services
  • Manage {vendor_count} vendors
  • Read more about these purposes
View preferences
  • {title}
  • {title}
  • {title}
We use cookies to ensure that we give you the best experience on our website. If you continue to use this site we will assume that you are happy with it.