👨👩👧 Pakistan Population Summit – Key Messages of Day 1
➡️ The Population Summit 2025 called for urgent, concrete, and evidence-driven actions to bring Pakistan’s population growth rate into alignment with its available resources. Speakers emphasized that without immediate course correction, Pakistan’s ability to develop, prosper, and meet the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) will remain severely constrained. The persistently high dependency ratio, they noted, is undermining human capital formation, slowing economic progress, and impeding improvements in key social indicators.
➡️ Experts and policymakers reached a clear consensus: women’s empowerment must lie at the heart of any successful population management strategy. This includes raising women’s literacy levels, narrowing gender disparities in education and employment, and expanding access to quality family planning services to reduce the country’s high unmet need. Participants stressed that unless population management is fully integrated into the national development paradigm, Pakistan risks remaining trapped in a cycle of underdevelopment and poverty.
➡️ A strong call was made for political will and coherent implementation of a comprehensive population policy—one that ensures provincial participation, adopts a multisectoral approach, and is backed by sustained financing. Without such a coordinated national effort, the country will continue to face social instability and potentially cataclysmic consequences stemming from unchecked population growth.
➡️ Dr. Zeba A. Sathar, Country Director of the Population Council, highlighted the grave consequences of inaction: worsening maternal health outcomes, preventable mortality and morbidity, poor educational attainment, and Pakistan’s limited capacity to cope with the mounting impacts of climate change. She emphasized that expanding family planning services and scaling up programs for women’s empowerment are essential to ensuring that “no one is left behind.” She also noted that Pakistan is “clearly out of balance,” with a population growth rate that is double that of its neighbouring countries.
➡️ The Minister of Finance underscored the need for enhanced domestic resource allocation, stressing that Pakistan must expand access to reproductive health and family planning services without relying on external assistance. He also highlighted the importance of preparing the country to harness its demographic dividend, which requires substantial investment in youth skills—particularly in digital technologies, artificial intelligence, and blockchain.
➡️ British High Commissioner Ms. Jane Marriott reaffirmed the United Kingdom’s continued support for Pakistan’s social sector development efforts, describing the partnership as one that is delivering meaningful improvements in the lives of Pakistani citizens.
➡️ Senior economists Dr. Hanid Mukhtar and Vice Chancellor LUMS Dr. Ali Cheema emphasized the critical link between economic revival and a declining population growth rate. Smaller families, they noted, lower the dependency ratio, boost both household and national savings, and free up government resources—allowing a shift from essential infrastructure spending toward broader economic development initiatives.
➡️ Overall, the Summit concluded with a unified message: Pakistan stands at a pivotal moment, and the choices made today will determine whether the country moves toward a stable, prosperous future or remains constrained by demographic pressures. The time for action, participants emphasized, is now.
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