Pakistan is about to learn how quickly “supportive deposits” can turn into a reserve drain. Islamabad says it will return matured loan deposits to the United Arab Emirates, a repayment that lands awkwardly for a country still trying to convince markets and the International Monetary Fund that hard-won stability is durable.
The numbers and the narrative do not fully line up across accounts. A senior Pakistani official told Dawn the UAE wants its money back quickly and Pakistan plans to repay $3.5 billion before month end, a sum that analysts there warn could squeeze the rupee and shrink the external buffer. Pakistan’s foreign ministry, by contrast, framed the move as a routine maturity under “bilateral commercial agreements,” which may calm diplomacy but does not change the basic mechanics: dollars leave the central bank, and the cushion against external shocks gets thinner.
That matters because Pakistan’s IMF program is built on the ability to keep rolling over deposits from partners rather than paying them down. Dawn reported Pakistan needs roughly $12.5 billion in rollovers from China, Saudi Arabia, and the UAE to maintain reserve levels and meet financing needs. A forced or accelerated payback raises an uncomfortable question for creditors and ratings watchers: if one partner is stepping back, do others start asking to be made whole, too?
The same “looks fine, feels fragile” theme showed up in the United States data tape. March payrolls grew by 178,000 jobs and unemployment dipped to 4.3 percent, but economists told CNN that weather effects, strike resolutions, and statistical quirks may have inflated the headline. The Washington Post’s reporting also noted a labor market that is adding jobs while bracing for higher energy costs as the Iran war pushes pump prices up, leaving the Federal Reserve with a familiar bind: growth is not collapsing, yet inflation pressure could re-accelerate as households and companies absorb pricier fuel and transport.