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Poverty Gini Coefficient: Pakistan Is Getting Poorer — And More Unequal

Pakistan’s poverty has surged from 21.9% to 28.2% since 2018-19 as incomes fell and inequality widened. The numbers demand structural reform.

Worn Pakistani 1000-rupee banknote

When numbers hurt, politicians shout. When data exposes structural decay, parties deflect. But the figures emerging from official reporting are not political slogans; they are a reflection of household reality, and that reality is stark.

According to a Planning Division-commissioned report reflected in the SDG Section charts shown above, poverty in Pakistan has increased from 21.9% in 2018-19 to 28.2% in 2024-25. That is not marginal deterioration. That is a structural reversal.

At the same time, average real household income has reportedly fallen by 12% since 2018-19. That means ordinary citizens today, in inflation-adjusted terms, are poorer than they were six years ago. The debate over which party is responsible becomes secondary to a more uncomfortable truth: the economic model is failing households.

The National Picture: Poverty Rising Across the Board

The poverty headcount chart (Fig-1) shows:

Category 2018-19 2024-25
National 21.9% 28.2%
Urban 11.0% 17.4%
Rural 28.3% 36.2%

Urban poverty rising from 11.0% to 17.4% signals collapse in purchasing power. Rural poverty climbing to 36.2% reflects agricultural stress, energy pricing distortions, and weak rural productivity.

This is not cyclical fluctuation. It is deterioration.

Provincial Breakdown: No Province Spared

Fig-2 of the official dataset shows poverty rising in every province:

Province 2018-19 2024-25
Punjab 16.5% 23.3%
Sindh 24.5% 32.6%
Khyber Pakhtunkhwa 28.7% 35.3%
Balochistan 41.8% 47.0%

Balochistan approaching nearly half its population in poverty is not merely a statistic; it is a governance alarm. Punjab’s jump from 16.5% to 23.3% shows economic slowdown penetrating the industrial core. Sindh and KP follow the same upward trajectory.

This uniformity of deterioration suggests systemic weakness, not provincial mismanagement alone.

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