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IT is not yet clear how deep and how sustained they are, but cracks are now appearing in the edifice that is the hybrid plus regime running Pakistan these days.

This is a natural consequence of the cul-de-sac where the economy is now parked. In the early months of 2025, Pakistan hit what I called “peak stability”, which was a state of affairs where the economy had been stabilised, its debilitating deficits bridged, inflation extinguished. The big question at the time was what comes next.

No economy can remain in stabilisation mode for very long. At some point, a vision to transition out of stabilisation towards growth had to be implemented, with a kind of growth that would not open the door to the deficits one more time. But that didn’t happen.

Earlier this year, I wrote that we have reached the end of stability. The hunger for revenues and foreign exchange is rising while the economy remains mired in a low-growth stability. And now that hunger has reached the hallowed halls of politics and tested the coalition upon which the government’s majority in parliament (or what is left of it anyway) stands.