The country's next government, to be chosen in the July 25 general elections, faces growing fears of a balance of payments crisis with speculation it will have to seek its second IMF bailout in five years, analysts say.
The central bank is running down its foreign reserves and devaluing the currency in a bid to bridge a yawning trade deficit, and the winners of the election will have “limited time” to act, Fitch ratings agency said on July 2.
Together, the economic challenges are “horrendous”, said Ashfaque Hasan Khan, an analyst and former financial advisor to the federal government.
“The most important (challenge) will be how to protect Pakistan's balance of payments, how to build Pakistan's foreign exchange reserves and how to fix its fiscal position,” he told AFP.
Confidence had grown slightly in recent years, with security improving and the IMF claiming in October last year that the country had emerged from crisis after completing its post-2013 bailout programme.
The previous PML-N government attempted to ease the power shortages, enact structural reforms and improve the creaky infrastructure which had hampered growth. China has also made progress on the multi-billion dollar China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC).
But growth has not been as fast as many hoped. The economy grew by 5.8 per cent during 2017-18, its fastest since 2005 but still missing a government target by 0.2pc.
Public debt now sits at roughly 70pc of GDP. And the deficit is widening.