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Opinion Print edition: 2026-04-22

Crypto ‘mania’

Published Updated

In moments of economic strain, policy innovation often arrives dressed as inevitability. The legalization of digital assets is one such moment, presented not merely as reform but as necessity. In Pakistan’s case, however, this “necessity” sits uneasily beside a history of recurring balance of payments crises, chronic fiscal deficits, and a currency that has rarely known stability. To introduce a volatile asset class into such a system is not modernization alone, it borders on recklessness.

The visible advantages are real. Bringing unregulated transactions into a legal framework offers the state greater visibility over previously opaque financial flows. It may improve compliance, widen the tax base, and provide individuals outside the formal banking system with alternative channels for savings and transfers. In a country where financial exclusion remains significant, this is no small consideration.

There is also the promise of remittance efficiency. For Pakistan, where remittances are a critical source of external support, blockchain based channels could reduce costs and delays, allowing more value to reach households. At a time when every dollar of inflow matters, such gains carry undeniable appeal.

Legalization also signals openness. It suggests a willingness to engage with emerging financial systems to attract speculative capital, and to project regulatory adaptability. For a government under constant pressure to demonstrate reform, this symbolism is politically convenient.

Yet these advantages are incremental and fragile. They depend on confidence, discipline, and above all, stability, qualities that Pakistan’s economic history has struggled to sustain. Against them stands a single factor whose impact is neither limited nor manageable: volatility.

Digital assets derive their value not from productive capacity or sovereign backing but from market sentiment and global liquidity cycles. Their movements are dictated by forces far removed from Pakistan’s domestic realities.

In stronger economies, such volatility may be absorbed. In Pakistan, it risks becoming an accelerant to existing instability.

The danger is not theoretical. Pakistan’s foreign exchange reserves have repeatedly hovered at precarious levels, often sufficient for only weeks of imports. In such a context, even a modest shift of capital into speculative digital assets can have disproportionate consequences. A sudden loss of confidence, whether triggered domestically or abroad, could prompt rapid liquidation and capital flight, placing immediate pressure on the rupee and the already strained reserve position.

What is presented as an avenue for inflow can just as easily become a channel for outflow. The asymmetry is stark. Inflows are gradual, conditional, and confidence driven. Outflows, in moments of panic, are swift and indiscriminate. For an economy living from one external support programme to the next, this is not a marginal risk, it is a structural threat.

Proponents argue that regulation will mitigate these dangers. That is an optimistic assumption in a system where regulatory enforcement is uneven and institutional capacity is limited. Legalization without robust oversight does not reduce risk; it formalizes exposure.

More troubling is the potential entanglement with external commercial and political interests. Pakistan’s economic policymaking has long been influenced by external dependencies, whether through multilateral lenders or bilateral arrangements. To add a new layer of dependence, tied to volatile and externally driven financial ecosystems, is to compound vulnerability, not reduce it.

The question, therefore, is not whether digital assets have utility, they do. The question is whether Pakistan, in its present condition, can afford the risks they carry. Economic sovereignty is not lost in a single decision; it erodes through cumulative exposure to forces beyond domestic control.

The promise of efficiency and inclusion operates within a narrow band of stability. Pakistan, by contrast, operates at the edge of it. To embed volatility into such a system is not reform in any meaningful sense. It is a wager taken from a position of weakness.

For a country with little margin for error, this is not merely experimentation. It is an invitation to amplify instability. In Pakistan’s case, this is not a leap into the future; it is a gamble with a past that has already warned against such risks.

Copyright Business Recorder, 2026

Haroon Rashid Siddiqi

The writer is a retired professional currently based in Canada

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