For much of the past two decades, policymakers around the world convinced themselves that geography no longer mattered. Technology was shrinking distances. Globalisation was integrating markets. Capital could move across continents with the click of a button. Supply chains stretched from Asia to Europe and North America with remarkable efficiency. The future, we were told, belonged to innovation, talent, and technology rather than physical location. Then reality intervened.
The pandemic exposed the vulnerability of global supply chains. The Russia-Ukraine war reminded the world that energy routes still matter. Rising tensions between the United States and China transformed trade into a strategic weapon. Shipping lanes, ports, pipelines, and logistics corridors suddenly returned to the centre of global economic thinking. The world discovered something it had forgotten. Geography never disappeared.
For a country often portrayed through the lens of economic crises, political instability, and security challenges, the development was a reminder that Pakistan still occupies a position that many countries would envy.
It merely took a brief holiday. This reality carries an important lesson for Pakistan. The release of Pakistan’s Economic Survey and Budget for 2026-27 coincided with another development that attracted international attention: the emerging Islamabad Memorandum between the United States and Iran. Regardless of how one views the agreement itself, the episode demonstrated that Pakistan remains relevant in a region where diplomatic relevance has become increasingly scarce. For a country often portrayed through the lens of economic crises, political instability, and security challenges, the development was a reminder that Pakistan still occupies a position that many countries would envy.
Yet the significance of this moment extends far beyond diplomacy. It raises a far more important question. What if Pakistan’s greatest economic asset is not its population, its natural resources, or even its entrepreneurial potential? What if its greatest economic asset is something far simpler and far more obvious-its location?
The Economic Survey tells a story that deserves recognition. Inflation has declined sharply from the painful levels experienced only a short time ago. Foreign exchange reserves have improved. The external account is more stable. Investor sentiment, while still fragile, is no longer dominated by fears of default. Compared with the uncertainty that prevailed only a few years ago, Pakistan’s macroeconomic position is undeniably stronger.
That achievement should not be underestimated. Stabilisation matters. Countries cannot grow sustainably while fighting continuous financial fires. Restoring confidence, controlling inflation, and rebuilding reserves are necessary foundations for long-term prosperity. But stabilisation is not prosperity. And therein lies the challenge revealed by the survey. Pakistan is becoming more stable than it is becoming productive.
Growth has returned, but not at the pace required to transform living standards. Investment remains below what is needed to absorb a rapidly growing workforce. Exports remain concentrated in a limited number of sectors. Productivity growth remains weak. The economy continues to spend significant energy managing crises instead of creating wealth. The distinction is important.
A country can stabilise without becoming rich. A country can balance its books without transforming its future. A country can survive without truly prospering. Pakistan has become remarkably good at survival. The next challenge is learning how to scale. This is where geography enters the conversation. Few countries are located at the intersection of so many regions. To Pakistan’s west lies Iran and the broader Middle East. To the north lie Central Asia’s energy resources and emerging markets. To the east lies one of the world’s largest consumer economies. To the south lies direct access to some of the most important maritime routes on the planet. Most nations spend decades trying to create competitive advantages.
Pakistan was born with one. The irony is that for much of its history, Pakistan has viewed geography primarily through a security lens. Borders represented risks. Regional politics represented threats. Strategic location was discussed mainly in military and diplomatic terms. The twenty-first century may demand a different perspective. The countries that are thriving today increasingly understand that location is not merely a security asset. It is an economic one.
Singapore transformed itself from a small island into one of the world’s most important trading hubs. The United Arab Emirates converted geography into aviation, logistics, tourism, and finance. Türkiye leveraged its position between Europe and Asia to become a manufacturing and transportation corridor. Vietnam inserted itself into global supply chains and became one of the fastest-growing economies in the world.
None succeeded simply because of where they were located. They succeeded because they understood how to monetise their location. That is the lesson Pakistan must absorb. The world is moving toward a new economic model. The age of hyper-globalisation is giving way to an age of regionalisation. Companies want supply chains closer to consumers. Governments want energy security. Manufacturers want resilience alongside efficiency. Economic alliances are increasingly shaped by geography once again. This shift creates opportunities for countries positioned between major regions.
Pakistan is one of those countries. But opportunity and achievement are not the same thing. History offers countless examples of nations that occupied strategic locations yet remained economically stagnant. Geography creates potential. Policy converts potential into prosperity. That conversion remains Pakistan’s unfinished task. The most important question raised by the Budget is therefore not whether a particular tax target will be achieved or whether a particular expenditure allocation is sufficient. Those debates matter, but they are tactical. The strategic question is much larger.
Is Pakistan building an economy capable of leveraging its geography?
Is it investing in connectivity, logistics, infrastructure, energy security, export competitiveness, and industrial productivity?
Is it positioning itself as a bridge between regions or merely existing between them?
The difference will determine whether the next decade becomes a period of transformation or another chapter in a long history of unrealised potential. For decades, Pakistan has relied heavily on narratives of strategic importance. Yet strategic importance by itself does not create jobs. It does not attract sustainable investment. It does not improve productivity. It does not raise living standards. Economic relevance does.
The Islamabad Memorandum is significant because it reminds the world that Pakistan still possesses strategic relevance. The Economic Survey is significant because it shows that macroeconomic stability is gradually returning. The Budget is significant because it provides an opportunity to connect those two realities.
Moments like this do not appear often. The world is rediscovering the importance of geography. Trade routes matter again. Energy corridors matter again. Connectivity matters again. Nations positioned at the crossroads of regions are becoming more valuable, not less. Pakistan cannot change its geography. Fortunately, it does not need to. The real challenge is learning how to profit from it. Because the countries that will lead the next decade will not simply occupy strategic locations. They will monetise them. Pakistan has spent years proving that it matters on the map. The question now is whether it can finally convert that position into lasting prosperity.
The writer is a financial expert and can be reached at jawadsaleem.1982@ gmail.com. He tweets @JawadSaleem1982
