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EDITORIAL: Debt ceiling breach signals fiscal risk
brecorder64d ago

EDITORIAL: Debt ceiling breach signals fiscal risk

EDITORIAL: The latest Debt Policy Statement 2026, prepared under the Fiscal Responsibility and Debt Limitation (FRDL) Act for submission to the National Assembly, once again tells the story of the country’s fiscal rulebook being treated as optional.According to the statement, in FY2024-25, public debt overshot the statutory ceiling by a staggering Rs16.8 trillion, climbing to 70.7 percent of GDP against a maximum permissible cap set by parliament of 56 percent.In other words, public debt exceeded the legal limit by a substantial 14.7 percent of GDP, demonstrating the government’s continued failure to impose fiscal discipline on itself.It goes without saying that this breach exposes a deep-seated structural flaw in Pakistan’s system of governance: spending first, borrowing more to finance that expenditure and retrofitting justifications later.Rules intended to impose fiscal discipline are routinely ignored, with Parliament usually looped in only after ceilings are crossed and the executive facing no immediate consequences for excess. It is clear that the state’s core operating model remains consumption-driven, resistant to reform, overly reliant on debt and indifferent to enhancing the economy’s productive capacity.The cumulative effect of this is that half the federal budget is now swallowed by debt servicing, shrinking space for development spending, hollowing out the PSDP (Public Sector Development Programme) and forcing ever-higher taxes on an already overburdened citizenry.Just last month, a leading think tank had highlighted the scale of Pakistan’s debt crisis: between FY2015 and FY2025 public debt ballooned by a massive 365 percent, surging from Rs17.3 trillion to Rs80.5 trillion, with debt servicing costs comfortably outpacing revenue growth during the past decade.Equally alarmingly, domestic debt servicing had emerged as the biggest driver of expenditure growth over the last three years, crowding out development outlays and starving the economy of the productive investment needed to break the debt trap. Against this bleak backdrop, the finance ministry’s assurances to Parliament ring hollow.Even as it concedes that the debt-to-GDP ratio worsened over the last fiscal year, the government maintains that it remains committed to following the FRDL Act and promises to reduce public debt to sustainable levels through fiscal consolidation, generating primary surpluses and a gradual reduction in the fiscal deficit.How this is to be achieved is far from clear as the Fiscal Policy Statement 2026 shows that the federal fiscal deficit also exceeded the parliament-set limit by 2.7 percent of GDP, underscoring that both core fiscal anchors — debt and deficit — have been breached simultaneously, leaving little credibility in claims of a near-term turnaround.Early signs this year aren’t too encouraging. The FBR has already missed its revenue target for the July-January period by Rs347 billion, even as the government leans more heavily on financial engineering to contain debt pressures.The current strategy focuses on lengthening maturities through greater issuance of medium- and long-term instruments, shifting towards fixed-rate debt, deepening the domestic market and tapping new investors at home and abroad, including through proposed Panda bonds.While these steps may ease refinancing and interest-rate risks in the short term, they leave the underlying imbalance intact: a government that continues to spend beyond its means and fails to raise sufficient revenue. Without correcting this gap, debt management will merely defer the reckoning rather than placing public finances on a sustainable footing.The reality is that until the mindset at the heart of governance changes, fiscal indiscipline will remain deeply entrenched.Departments will continue to exceed their budgets, state spending will favour consumption over productive investment, the burden of pensions will swell and the civil bureaucracy will remain bloated.The government will find itself borrowing not only to cover towering existing debt but also to finance these ongoing obligations, creating a self-perpetuating cycle that thwarts any meaningful attempt at fiscal reform.Copyright Business Recorder, 2026

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Anthony Scaramucci Says He's 'Buying Bitcoin' As Apex Crypto Dips Below $73,000: 'Accumulate, Don't Speculate'
benzinga64d ago

Anthony Scaramucci Says He's 'Buying Bitcoin' As Apex Crypto Dips Below $73,000: 'Accumulate, Don't Speculate'

SkyBridge Capital CEO and vocal cryptocurrency advocate Anthony Scaramucci advised steady accumulation rather than speculative trading for Bitcoin (CRYPTO: BTC) on Tuesday amid the apex cryptocurrency’s ongoing decline.Scaramucci Wants Investors To Buy BTC’s DipScaramucci endorsed Strategy Inc. (NASDAQ:MSTR) co-founder Michael Saylor’s HODL mantra, saying, “Accumulate, don’t speculate.”Accumulate, don't speculate. #Bitcoin https://t.co/h7Q0A25aRK— Anthony Scaramucci (@Scaramucci) February 3, 2026Scaramucci, who has 70% of his wealth tied in Bitcoin-related investments, said over the weekend that he was buying the latest dip.Scaramucci has extensively used his social reach and public platforms to promote the leading ...Full story available on Benzinga.com

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Delhi to Antarctica: AIIMS doctors redefine ‘remote’ using telerobotic system
toi64d ago

Delhi to Antarctica: AIIMS doctors redefine ‘remote’ using telerobotic system

Doctors in Delhi successfully conducted a live ultrasound scan on a patient in Antarctica using a remotely controlled robotic arm. This groundbreaking demonstration by AIIMS highlights the potential for delivering specialist medical care across vast distances, offering a vital solution for remote and underserved regions.

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Ethereum Whale’s Stunning $8.7M Purchase After Two-Year Dormancy Signals Strategic Shift
bitcoinworld64d ago

Ethereum Whale’s Stunning $8.7M Purchase After Two-Year Dormancy Signals Strategic Shift

BitcoinWorldEthereum Whale’s Stunning $8.7M Purchase After Two-Year Dormancy Signals Strategic ShiftIn a stunning move that has captured the attention of the cryptocurrency market, an anonymous Ethereum whale, dormant for precisely two years, has executed a massive $8.7 million purchase of ETH, according to on-chain data. This strategic acquisition, reported by prominent on-chain analyst ai_9684xtpa, involves 4,020 ETH and suggests a significant shift in behavior from [...]This post Ethereum Whale’s Stunning $8.7M Purchase After Two-Year Dormancy Signals Strategic Shift first appeared on BitcoinWorld.

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Why Xero shares are now back in the buy zone
fool_au64d ago

Why Xero shares are now back in the buy zone

A leading analyst expects a much better year ahead for Xero shares. But why?The post Why Xero shares are now back in the buy zone appeared first on The Motley Fool Australia.

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dawn64d ago

Gold, silver rebound

LONDON: Stock markets struggled on Tuesday while gold and silver prices rebounded in fresh volatile trading.Oil prices rose and the dollar mostly dipped as investors weighed company earnings against geopolitical unrest.The price of gold climbed more than six per cent to $4,989.20 an ounce. Last week it reached a record-high close to $5,600 before tumbling. Gold is “heading for its biggest daily gain since 2008, as prices rebounded sharply following the steepest two-day decline in decades,” said analyst Axel Rudolph at trading platform IG.Silver surged more than 15pc to $86 on Tuesday, still well short of the record near $120 it hit last week.“A sense of calm descended after the precious metal ructions, opening the door for investors to buy on the dip,” noted Richard Hunter, head of markets at Interactive Investor.Gold and silver prices have been on a tear in recent months, benefitting from being seen as a safe haven investments during times of geopolitical tensions.Demand for the precious metals was also being spurred by sliding value of the dollar, which was weakened by speculation that US President Donald Trump is happy to see the world’s reserve currency weaken despite the potential risk of pushing up US inflation.Published in Dawn, February 4th, 2026

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