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| Border security operations along the Pakistan-Afghanistan frontier highlighting how rising tensions are increasing economic and strategic pressure on Pakistan. |
The recent escalation along the Pakistan–Afghanistan border is being described as a security crisis. Cross-border attacks. Retaliatory strikes. Rising tension.
But the real risk is not a new war.
The real risk is something slower. And more damaging.
Pakistan is entering a phase of permanent instability it cannot afford.
A Conflict Without a Clear End
Since the Taliban returned to power in Kabul in August 2021, militant violence inside Pakistan has risen sharply. According to the Pakistan Institute for Conflict and Security Studies (PICSS), militant attacks increased by more than 50 percent between 2022 and 2024.
Most of the attacks are linked to the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), which Islamabad says operates from safe havens across the border.
Kabul denies responsibility. Pakistan demands action.
The result is a familiar pattern:
Attacks inside Pakistan
Diplomatic protests
Limited military responses
Temporary calm
Then escalation again
This is not a conventional conflict. It is a cycle.
And cycles tend to last.
Sources: PICSS, ACLED, Reuters security reporting.
The Strategic Squeeze
Security pressure on the western border comes at a difficult moment.
Pakistan is already managing:
An IMF stabilization program worth $3 billion
Public debt near 70 percent of GDP
Policy interest rates in double digits through 2024–25
Growth expected around 2–3 percent (IMF projection)
At the same time, relations with India remain tense, requiring sustained military readiness on the eastern front.
Security operations are expensive. Border fencing, troop deployment, intelligence expansion, counterterror operations. These costs do not wait for fiscal space.
When a country must reduce its deficit and increase security spending at the same time, the pressure shows up elsewhere.
Usually in development spending.
Sources: IMF Pakistan Country Reports, World Bank, SIPRI.
Security Risk Is an Economic Signal
Investors do not read security incidents the way governments do. They read them as risk.
Pakistan already ranks high on political and economic risk indices. Renewed militant activity adds another layer of uncertainty.
The consequences are practical:
Higher insurance premiums for logistics and infrastructure
Delays in project financing
Cautious foreign direct investment
Domestic investors holding back expansion
According to the State Bank of Pakistan, net FDI inflows remain below $2 billion annually, far lower than regional peers.
Economic recovery requires confidence. Security instability reduces it.
The Cost of Permanent Alert
Pakistan’s recent macroeconomic improvement is built on compression:
Imports restricted
Interest rates kept high
Public spending tightly controlled
The current account deficit narrowed to below 1 percent of GDP in FY2024, largely because domestic demand fell.
In such an environment, even moderate increases in security spending matter.
If defense and internal security costs rise, the government has limited options:
Cut development spending
Increase taxes
Borrow more
Each option slows growth.
Countries rarely weaken because of one crisis. They weaken when too many resources are used to manage risk instead of building capacity.
Afghanistan’s Internal Constraint
Pakistan’s leverage over the situation is limited.
Afghanistan today faces:
International financial isolation
Frozen central bank reserves
GDP contraction since 2021
High unemployment and poverty
The Taliban government operates with limited administrative reach, especially in border regions.
Expecting full control over militant networks under these conditions may be unrealistic.
Which means the security pressure is unlikely to disappear quickly.
Sources: World Bank Afghanistan Economic Updates, UNDP.
The Investor’s Calculation
From a market perspective, Pakistan currently carries multiple risk layers:
IMF dependence
Low growth
Political uncertainty
Security volatility
This explains why large-scale private investment remains cautious.
Even CPEC activity has slowed compared to earlier phases.
Capital flows toward stability. Not toward uncertainty that looks structural.
And the Pakistan Afghanistan conflict increasingly looks structural.
Why This Matters for Growth
The immediate concern is not state collapse. Pakistan’s institutions remain functional. Foreign exchange reserves have improved. Inflation is moderating.
The long-term risk is slower.
Persistent security tension leads to:
Lower investment
Higher risk premiums
Reduced job creation
Limited export expansion
Over time, this lowers the country’s growth potential.
The economy stabilizes. But it does not accelerate.
That is the real danger. Stability without momentum.
What Would Change the Equation
For the Pakistan Afghanistan conflict to stop acting as a growth constraint, three shifts are necessary:
Operational cooperation to reduce cross-border militant movement
Economic stabilization inside Afghanistan, reducing incentives for armed networks
Stronger domestic fiscal capacity, allowing Pakistan to absorb security costs without cutting development
None of these conditions will emerge quickly.
Which means policymakers must plan for a prolonged period of elevated security spending.
The Bottom Line
Pakistan is not entering a new war with Afghanistan.
It is entering a phase of chronic tension.
And chronic tension has a cost. It affects budgets. It affects investment. It affects growth expectations.
The country’s recent stability has been achieved through economic restraint.
The real question now is harder.
Can Pakistan grow while operating under permanent pressure?
Because in today’s environment, the greatest risk is not crisis.
It is slow limitation.

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