Pakistan’s trade deficit widens past $22B despite Jan improvement
Imports rise, exports fall in first seven months of FY26

Haris Zamir
Business Editor
Experience of almost 33 years where started the journey of financial journalism from Business Recorder in 1992. From 2006 onwards attached with Television Media worked at Sun Tv, Dawn Tv, Geo Tv and Dunya Tv. During the period also worked as a stringer for Bloomberg for seven years and Dow Jones for five years. Also wrote articles for several highly acclaimed periodicals like the Newsline, Pakistan Gulf Economist and Money Matters (The News publications)

Pakistan’s trade deficit widened sharply in the first seven months of the current fiscal year, crossing $22 billion, despite a notable improvement in January driven by stronger exports and lower imports, official data showed.
Figures released by the Pakistan Bureau of Statistics showed the trade deficit during July-January FY26 rose 28.22% year-on-year, as imports increased 9.42% while exports fell 7.09%.
Total imports during the period reached $40.23 billion, compared with exports of $18.20 billion, resulting in a cumulative deficit of more than $22 billion.
In January, however, the trade gap narrowed to $2.73 billion, down 7% year-on-year and 29% month-on-month, according to provisional data. Imports during the month stood at $5.79 billion, while exports improved to $3.06 billion.
On a monthly basis, exports surged nearly 35%, while imports declined about 5%, helping contain the deficit, the statistics bureau said.
Analysts said the January improvement reflects short-term export recovery rather than a structural shift.
“While January numbers show a welcome contraction in the trade deficit, the cumulative picture remains challenging,” Topline Research said in a note. “The 7MFY26 trade deficit now stands at $17.2 billion, up 28% year-on-year, underscoring continued pressure on the external account.”
Topline Research said it maintains its full-year projections in line with central bank guidance, expecting exports to decline 1% and imports to grow 13% in FY26.
Analysts cautioned that sustaining export momentum will be critical in the coming months, as import demand remains elevated and global trade conditions stay uncertain.







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