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.
