Looking forward, the potential of e-invoicing and supply chain finance lies in how effectively they are implemented. The transition will require more than technology. It will depend on policy alignment, stakeholder collaboration, and continuous innovation. A system that captures, validates, and utilizes financial data can unlock opportunities that were previously out of reach.
The Karandaaz–EY study suggests that this shift could redefine how financial inclusion is achieved. Instead of focusing solely on access, the emphasis moves toward connectivity, connecting businesses to capital, transactions to financing, and data to decision-making. In that sense, the future of SME financing in Pakistan may not depend on expanding existing systems, but on building new ones that are inherently more connected, transparent, and efficient. The journey from paper-based transactions to digital ecosystems is not just a technological evolution. It is a reimagining of how economies function, and how growth can be made more inclusive, sustainable, and scalable.
Source Intelligence Layer: 1
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