A decade after its last growth wave, Pakistan is showing the same winning signs again. In 2014–15, Pakistan’s economy quietly flipped the script. Exports surged, reserves crossed $10 billion, CPEC was launched, and trade agreements with the EU reshaped Pakistan’s global standing. The result? GDP rose from 2.6% in 2013 to 4.7% by 2016. Investors who understood the signals early were rewarded handsomely.
Now, in 2024–25, we’re seeing the same economic signals resurface stronger and louder than ever.
According to Reuters, GDP grew 2.4% in Q3 of FY25, prompting the National Accounts Committee to revise Pakistan’s full-year projection to 2.68%, expanding the economy’s size to $410.96 billion.
Simultaneously, inflation has hit a 56-year low, with the Pakistan Bureau of Statistics reporting CPI at 0.30% in April 2025, down from 0.70% in March — the lowest rate since 1968. This price stability is the backbone of the current rally in confidence.
Agriculture posted a surprise 1.18% growth in Q3 despite sectoral challenges, signalling resilience in rural productivity. Meanwhile, the State Bank of Pakistan slashed interest rates by 100 basis points, bringing the benchmark rate to 11% and laying the foundation for more accessible credit and liquidity in the market.
Pakistan’s current account surplus hit $700 million in the first eight months of FY25, buoyed by a combination of favourable import prices and rising external inflows. Bloomberg reports that remittances are expected to exceed $38 billion in 2025, providing critical support to Pakistan’s balance of payments and currency reserves.
Fiscal reforms are also holding strong. The government has intensified efforts to tighten spending and boost tax collection, reinforcing investor confidence in the long-term stability of the economic system.
Global financial institutions have begun endorsing the shift.
But this is not just a top-down recovery — the public feels it too.
Independent surveys show an undeniable shift in local sentiment:
All the core ingredients of the 2014–15 upswing are back: rising GDP, fiscal discipline, investor trust, strong remittance flows, and public optimism. But this time, there’s more — inflation is at record lows, global institutions are backing the recovery, and confidence on the ground is peaking.
So, the question is no longer whether Pakistan is on the upswing. It’s whether you’ll move early enough to ride it.
At One Homes, we build for these very moments. Our developments in Lahore and Islamabad are crafted for overseas Pakistanis who recognise patterns early, invest with vision, and grow with the country’s next chapter. The comeback isn’t coming. It’s already here.