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Pakistan’s $1.6 billion mobile phone imports in first ten months of fiscal year 2025–26 amid economic crisis

The monthly figures themselves tell a troubling story. In April 2026 alone, Pakistan imported mobile phones worth 49.4 billion rupees, compared to 41.6 billion rupees in March 2026 and 35.1 billion rupees in April 2025.

May 26, 2026 - Updated on May 27, 2026
in Opinion
Uraan Pakistan: A closer look at the country’s economic direction
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Dr Alamdar Hussain Malik

Pakistan is passing through one of the most difficult economic phases in its modern history.
IBehind every statistical figure lies a painful human reality — families struggling to pay electricity bills, young graduates searching endlessly for jobs, small businesses closing their doors, and farmers unable to recover rising input costs. Inflation has silently eroded the dignity of the common citizen, while economic uncertainty has become a daily companion of millions. Rising inflation, unemployment, shrinking industrial activity, increasing poverty, mounting foreign debt, and continuous pressure on foreign exchange reserves have badly affected the social and economic fabric of the country. Every day, the government appeals for economic discipline, austerity, and sacrifice. Industries complain of declining production, the business community demands stability, and millions of ordinary Pakistanis struggle merely to manage basic necessities of life.

In such painful economic circumstances, the official figures regarding mobile phone imports are both astonishing and deeply concerning. According to government data, Pakistan imported mobile phones worth 455.7 billion rupees during the first ten months of Fiscal Year 2025–26.

This represents an increase of 30.29 percent compared to the previous year. In dollar terms, this import bill is equivalent to nearly 1.6 billion U.S. dollars — an enormous amount for an economy that repeatedly faces shortages of foreign exchange and depends heavily on external borrowing to survive.

The monthly figures themselves tell a troubling story. In April 2026 alone, Pakistan imported mobile phones worth 49.4 billion rupees, compared to 41.6 billion rupees in March 2026 and 35.1 billion rupees in April 2025.

Despite continuous discussions about economic crisis, import restrictions, and financial discipline, the demand for imported smartphones and electronic gadgets continues to rise rapidly.

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No doubt, in the modern digital age, mobile phones are not merely luxury items. They are necessary for communication, education, banking, online business, and access to information. Students use them for learning, professionals use them for work, and businesses rely on them for commercial activities. However, the real issue is not the use of technology itself; the real issue is Pakistan’s dangerous dependence on imported finished products while failing to build strong domestic manufacturing and technological capacity.

This situation exposes a painful contradiction within Pakistan’s economic structure. A country that struggles to pay for fuel imports, essential medicines, industrial raw materials, and machinery is spending nearly 1.6 billion dollars on imported mobile phones in just ten months. At a time when factories are shutting down, industrial workers are losing jobs, farmers are suffering due to rising input costs, and the livestock and dairy sectors continue to face policy neglect, such massive spending on consumer electronics raises serious questions about national priorities and economic planning.

We have to send a strong and serious message to policymakers that in a struggling, fragile, and trembling economy like Pakistan’s, can the country truly afford imports worth nearly 1.6 billion dollars solely on mobile phones?

This is not merely a question of consumer behavior; it is a question of economic survival, national priorities, and strategic planning. When the nation continuously appeals for loans, seeks IMF assistance, cuts development spending, and asks ordinary citizens to bear the burden of inflation and taxation, then such extraordinary import figures demand immediate policy reflection and corrective measures.

The tragedy is not merely economic; it is also structural and psychological. Pakistan has increasingly become a consumption-oriented society that imports technology but produces very little of its own. Instead of developing world-class manufacturing industries, research centers, engineering innovation, and technology exports, the country remains dependent on foreign products and foreign currencies. Every imported smartphone represents not only an outflow of precious foreign exchange but also a reminder of the country’s weak industrial foundation.

One must ask: why has Pakistan failed to develop a strong indigenous electronics industry despite having a large youth population, talented engineers, and a huge domestic market? Why are local assembly plants still unable to move toward genuine manufacturing and technological innovation? Why has industrial policy remained focused on short-term consumption rather than long-term productive capacity? These are uncomfortable but necessary questions.

The painful reality is that economic independence cannot be achieved merely through loans, temporary IMF programs, or short-term administrative measures. Nations become economically strong when they produce, innovate, export, and reduce unnecessary dependence on imported finished goods. Without serious investment in local manufacturing, engineering education, research and development, and technology transfer, Pakistan may continue to remain trapped in a cycle of imports, debt, and recurring economic crises.

Pakistan’s $1.6 Billion Mobile Phone Imports in the First Ten Months of Fiscal Year 2025–26 Amid Economic Crisis should not simply be viewed as a trade statistic. It should be seen as a reflection of a deeper economic imbalance — an imbalance where consumption is growing faster than production, imports are expanding faster than exports, and dependency is increasing while domestic industrial strength remains weak.

At a time when the common citizen is sacrificing daily comforts due to inflation and economic hardship, these figures demand serious reflection from policymakers, economists, industrial planners, and political leadership.

The nation must ask itself an honest question: can a fragile economy survive for long while consuming far more than it produces? Until Pakistan seriously addresses this imbalance, economic stability may remain temporary, fragile, and painfully uncertain.

 

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