The Government of Pakistan is actively working on the development of a comprehensive and enabling policy framework designed to foster impact investing across the country. This strategic initiative aims to encourage deeper private sector participation and systematically channel investment capital toward highly measurable social, economic, and climate focused outcomes. The policy push underscores a significant transition in national economic governance, moving toward a model where financial returns are intentionally aligned with sustainable national development priorities and environmental preservation metrics.
This policy direction was formally disclosed by Adnan Pasha Siddiqui, Advisor to the Federal Minister for Finance and Revenue, while delivering an address at the Impact Finance Training 2026 workshop held in Karachi. Siddiqui highly commended the capacity building initiative and stressed that modernizing the skills and understanding of the local financial sector remains an absolute priority for the state. He clarified that both the Social Impact Financing and Sustainable Finance frameworks established by the state make it explicitly clear that mobilizing private capital tied directly to developmental outcomes is absolutely essential for advancing Pakistan long term economic growth and climate resilience goals.
The high level two day training workshop, appropriately themed as Impact Finance Training 2026 From Value to Vision, was organized and hosted by Karandaaz Pakistan in close collaboration with the Pakistan Banks Association, while receiving direct support from the Federal Ministry of Finance. Building directly upon the structural foundations laid during previous institutional initiatives, the extensive seminar brought together an influential group of senior banking professionals, executives from development finance institutions, and directors from leading investment firms. The overarching objective of the gathering focused on drastically strengthening the integration of structured impact finance principles into everyday commercial investment and lending decisions.
The educational and practical modules during the workshop were steered by international impact finance practitioner Alex MacGillivray, who serves as the Executive Director at the Joint Impact Model Foundation. The training concentrated primarily on delivering realistic, actionable frameworks that allow commercial institutions to align their capital allocation methods with verifiable social and environmental goals. Highlighting the institutional importance of this shift, Syed Salim Raza, Chairperson of Karandaaz Pakistan, explained that impact finance represents a critical evolution in how modern financial entities must evaluate risk, value, and long term developmental progress. He reiterated that Karandaaz is committed to equipping commercial entities with the precise tools needed to embed these critical social considerations into their standard credit portfolios.
International developmental partners also underscored the global necessity of this paradigm shift within Pakistan financial markets. Thomas Burge, Deputy Head of Mission at the British Deputy High Commission, remarked that future sustainable economic growth and climate adaptation will heavily depend on a nation capacity to pull in private financing at a massive scale. He emphasized that the United Kingdom remains deeply pleased to support capacity building exercises that prepare local bankers to manage high impact portfolios efficiently. Furthermore, Muneer Kamal, Chief Executive Officer and Secretary General of the Pakistan Banks Association, reinforced that the domestic banking industry is fully committed to facilitating regulatory advocacy and industry wide collaboration to establish responsible, development oriented financing practices as a standard norm across all 47 member financial institutions in the country.
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