Saturday, December 06, 2025 | 06:29 PM ISTहिंदी में पढें
Business Standard
Notification Icon
userprofile IconSearch

As Pak looks to IMF for bailout, flaws in China's belt and road exposed

Pakistan's problem isn't only poor macroeconomic stewardship, however. It's the deals the preceding administration struck with China

Pakistan rupee
premium

Pakistan rupee

Mihir Sharma | Bloomberg
Pakistan’s government has finally admitted it needs help. Finance Minister Asad Umar says he will be meeting officials of the International Monetary Fund on the sidelines of its annual meeting Bali this weekend. There he’ll try and work out the terms for a bailout that would cover a $10 billion hole in Pakistan’s financing needs.

The decision has to be a little humiliating for new Pakistani Prime Minister Imran Khan -- an anti-Western firebrand who’s had to turn to the West for help just like virtually every other Pakistani leader before him. More importantly, the process is likely to be