logo
Pakistan June inflation rises 3.2% y/y, in line with forecast

Pakistan June inflation rises 3.2% y/y, in line with forecast

Gulf Today3 days ago
Pakistan's consumer price inflation rose 3.2 per cent year-on-year in June, the statistics bureau said on Tuesday, broadly in line with the finance ministry's projection of 3 per cent to 4 per cent issued a day earlier.
On a month-on-month basis, prices increased 0.2 per cent in June, reversing a 0.2 per cent decline in May.
The data comes after Pakistan's central bank kept its key interest rate unchanged at 11 per cent in June.
The State Bank of Pakistan (SBP) said in its latest monetary policy statement that inflation was expected to show some near-term volatility but gradually stabilise within the 5 per cent to 7 per cent target range.
The figures also come weeks after Pakistan unveiled its annual budget, which included new revenue measures and subsidy cuts as part of efforts to secure a long-term loan programme from the International Monetary Fund (IMF).
Analysts have warned that higher energy and tax costs could stoke inflation in the second half of the year.
Pakistan's stock exchange rose 2.3 per cent on the day to close at an all-time high of 128475.7 points, on Tuesday, the first day of the new fiscal year.
Meanwhile last week the Government of Pakistan and the Asian Development Bank (ADB) on Tuesday signed a $350 million loan agreement for the 'Women Inclusive Finance Sector Development programme (Subprogram-II),' aimed at strengthening women's access to finance and advancing gender-inclusive economic development.
According to the Associated Press of Pakistan (APP), which cited a press release issued by the Economic Affairs Division, the agreement was signed by Sabina Qureshi, Additional Secretary of the Economic Affairs Division, and Dinesh Raj Shiwakoti, Head of the Project Administration Unit at ADB.
The State Bank of Pakistan signed the Project Agreement for the Financial Intermediary Loan.
This agreement reflects the Government of Pakistan's continued commitment to empowering women economically by expanding access to financial resources, encouraging entrepreneurship, and generating employment opportunities.
The initiative is designed to promote a more inclusive and sustainable economic future for women across the country. Subprogram II builds on the foundational policy reforms introduced under Subprogram I and focuses on four strategic areas. These include establishing a supportive policy and regulatory framework for women's financial inclusion; increasing the availability of financial resources tailored for women; strengthening the entrepreneurial skills and capabilities of women; and fostering inclusive and equitable workplace environments within the financial sector.
Meanwhile Pakistan has been ranked among the world's top emerging economies following a significant drop in its default risk in a major boost to investor sentiment and international credibility.
According to a new report by the globally renowned financial data agency Bloomberg, Pakistan's probability of default has declined from 59 per cent to 47 per cent over the past 12 months — a notable improvement of 1100 basis points.
The report highlights Pakistan's growing economic stability and successful financial reforms as key factors behind this improvement. Bloomberg attributes the positive shift to enhanced investor confidence, improved foreign exchange reserves, successful negotiations with the International Monetary Fund (IMF), and increased efforts to boost revenue through domestic reforms. Pakistan's inclusion at the top of Bloomberg's list of emerging economies reflects a strong endorsement of the government's recent economic measures. The report states that credit rating upgrades and strengthened relations with international financial institutions have contributed to a more stable outlook, encouraging global investors to re-engage with Pakistan.
'Pakistan's significant reduction in default risk sends a powerful message to the global financial community,' the report noted. 'It is a major milestone on the country's path to economic recovery.'
Bloomberg's data also compared Pakistan's performance with other emerging economies. Countries like Argentina, Tunisia, and Nigeria saw modest improvements in their default risk (falling by -7 per cent, -4 per cent, and -5 per cent, respectively), while others, such as Turkiye, Ecuador, Egypt, and Gabon, remain in the high-risk category. Pakistan's improved economic outlook has also been supported by a gradual rise in remittances and exports, both key components of the country's external financial health.
The default probability down from 59 per cent to 47 per cent, a massive 1,100 basis points improvement.
Agencies
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Pakistan June inflation rises 3.2% y/y, in line with forecast
Pakistan June inflation rises 3.2% y/y, in line with forecast

Gulf Today

time3 days ago

  • Gulf Today

Pakistan June inflation rises 3.2% y/y, in line with forecast

Pakistan's consumer price inflation rose 3.2 per cent year-on-year in June, the statistics bureau said on Tuesday, broadly in line with the finance ministry's projection of 3 per cent to 4 per cent issued a day earlier. On a month-on-month basis, prices increased 0.2 per cent in June, reversing a 0.2 per cent decline in May. The data comes after Pakistan's central bank kept its key interest rate unchanged at 11 per cent in June. The State Bank of Pakistan (SBP) said in its latest monetary policy statement that inflation was expected to show some near-term volatility but gradually stabilise within the 5 per cent to 7 per cent target range. The figures also come weeks after Pakistan unveiled its annual budget, which included new revenue measures and subsidy cuts as part of efforts to secure a long-term loan programme from the International Monetary Fund (IMF). Analysts have warned that higher energy and tax costs could stoke inflation in the second half of the year. Pakistan's stock exchange rose 2.3 per cent on the day to close at an all-time high of 128475.7 points, on Tuesday, the first day of the new fiscal year. Meanwhile last week the Government of Pakistan and the Asian Development Bank (ADB) on Tuesday signed a $350 million loan agreement for the 'Women Inclusive Finance Sector Development programme (Subprogram-II),' aimed at strengthening women's access to finance and advancing gender-inclusive economic development. According to the Associated Press of Pakistan (APP), which cited a press release issued by the Economic Affairs Division, the agreement was signed by Sabina Qureshi, Additional Secretary of the Economic Affairs Division, and Dinesh Raj Shiwakoti, Head of the Project Administration Unit at ADB. The State Bank of Pakistan signed the Project Agreement for the Financial Intermediary Loan. This agreement reflects the Government of Pakistan's continued commitment to empowering women economically by expanding access to financial resources, encouraging entrepreneurship, and generating employment opportunities. The initiative is designed to promote a more inclusive and sustainable economic future for women across the country. Subprogram II builds on the foundational policy reforms introduced under Subprogram I and focuses on four strategic areas. These include establishing a supportive policy and regulatory framework for women's financial inclusion; increasing the availability of financial resources tailored for women; strengthening the entrepreneurial skills and capabilities of women; and fostering inclusive and equitable workplace environments within the financial sector. Meanwhile Pakistan has been ranked among the world's top emerging economies following a significant drop in its default risk in a major boost to investor sentiment and international credibility. According to a new report by the globally renowned financial data agency Bloomberg, Pakistan's probability of default has declined from 59 per cent to 47 per cent over the past 12 months — a notable improvement of 1100 basis points. The report highlights Pakistan's growing economic stability and successful financial reforms as key factors behind this improvement. Bloomberg attributes the positive shift to enhanced investor confidence, improved foreign exchange reserves, successful negotiations with the International Monetary Fund (IMF), and increased efforts to boost revenue through domestic reforms. Pakistan's inclusion at the top of Bloomberg's list of emerging economies reflects a strong endorsement of the government's recent economic measures. The report states that credit rating upgrades and strengthened relations with international financial institutions have contributed to a more stable outlook, encouraging global investors to re-engage with Pakistan. 'Pakistan's significant reduction in default risk sends a powerful message to the global financial community,' the report noted. 'It is a major milestone on the country's path to economic recovery.' Bloomberg's data also compared Pakistan's performance with other emerging economies. Countries like Argentina, Tunisia, and Nigeria saw modest improvements in their default risk (falling by -7 per cent, -4 per cent, and -5 per cent, respectively), while others, such as Turkiye, Ecuador, Egypt, and Gabon, remain in the high-risk category. Pakistan's improved economic outlook has also been supported by a gradual rise in remittances and exports, both key components of the country's external financial health. The default probability down from 59 per cent to 47 per cent, a massive 1,100 basis points improvement. Agencies

China rolls over $3.4 billion of commercial loans to Pakistan
China rolls over $3.4 billion of commercial loans to Pakistan

Gulf Today

time5 days ago

  • Gulf Today

China rolls over $3.4 billion of commercial loans to Pakistan

China has rolled over $3.4 billion in loans to Islamabad, which together with other recent commercial and multilateral lending will boost Pakistan's foreign exchange reserves to $14 billion, a finance ministry source said on Sunday. Beijing rolled over $2.1 billion, which has been in Pakistan's central bank's reserves for the last three years, and refinanced another $1.3 billion commercial loan, which Islamabad had paid back two months ago, the source said. Another $1 billion from Middle Eastern commercial banks and $500 million from multilateral financing have also been received, he said. 'This brings our reserves in line with the IMF target,' he said. The loans, especially the Chinese ones, are critical to shoring up Pakistan's low foreign reserves, which the IMF required to be over $14 billion at the end of the current fiscal year on June 30. Pakistani authorities say that the country's economy has stabilised through ongoing reforms under a $7 billion IMF bailout. Few days earlier, the Asian Development Bank (ADB) has approved a $800 million financing programme to support Pakistan's fiscal sustainability and strengthen its public financial management systems, the Associated Press of Pakistan (APP) reported, citing a press release issued by the ADB. The initiative, titled the 'Improved Resource Mobilisation and Utilisation Reform Programme - Subprogramme 2,' includes a $300 million policy-based loan and ADB's first-ever policy-based guarantee of up to $500 million. Agencies

EdgeCortix's SAKURA‑II Elevates Raspberry Pi 5 with On‑Device Generative AI
EdgeCortix's SAKURA‑II Elevates Raspberry Pi 5 with On‑Device Generative AI

Arabian Post

time16-06-2025

  • Arabian Post

EdgeCortix's SAKURA‑II Elevates Raspberry Pi 5 with On‑Device Generative AI

EdgeCortix has launched its SAKURA‑II M.2 AI accelerator for the Raspberry Pi 5 and other Arm‑based platforms, enabling high‑performance, energy‑efficient execution of generative AI at the device edge. With 60 TOPS and 30 TFLOPS performance within an 8–10 W power envelope, the SAKURA‑II module supports advanced models including Llama 2, Stable Diffusion, Vision Transformers and VLMs on compact, affordable hardware. Dr Sakyasingha Dasgupta, EdgeCortix founder and CEO, highlighted that the integration 'opens the door for innovators and enterprises around the world to build smarter, faster, and more efficient edge AI‑driven devices'. This remark underscores a clear strategic pivot: migrating AI workloads away from cloud dependence and embedding them directly into low‑power devices. Venture partner Sailesh Chittipeddi echoed this view, emphasising the appeal for IoT and edge application engineers seeking scalability without datacentre overhead. The core of SAKURA‑II is EdgeCortix's DNA architecture, offering high memory bandwidth—up to 68 GB/s—and support for dual-channel LPDDR4x. This combination optimises batch‑1 inferencing for real‑time AI tasks while maintaining minimal latency and maximised compute utilisation. ADVERTISEMENT Market response has been mixed. It's FOSS notes the roughly US $349 price tag for the M.2 module, with no explicit mention of shipping costs, urging buyers to clarify before purchase. A TechPowerUp forum debate revealed cost‑sensitive hobbyists comparing it to a US $130 AI HAT offering about 26 TOPS. One user characterised SAKURA‑II as 'on another completely different ballpark' due to its RAM and bandwidth advantages for advanced applications. For industrial users, particularly those operating in space‑weight‑power‑cost constrained environments such as drones, robotics, smart agriculture or security, SAKURA‑II's offline capabilities are pivotal. By enabling autonomous AI without cloud reliance, organisations can enhance resilience and reduce latency in mission‑critical operations. Academic research on efficient edge deployment reinforces this evolution. A paper from June 10, 2025 demonstrated quantised YOLOv4‑Tiny object detection on Raspberry Pi 5, achieving 28.2 ms inference per image at 13.85 W power consumption. While this study used CPU‑based INT8 quantisation, the performance and consumption metrics set a baseline that illustrates SAKURA‑II's potential leap in efficiency and speed via dedicated silicon acceleration. EdgeCortix's positioning also aligns with wider trends in AI hardware development. Their DNA technology enables dynamic reconfiguration and mixed‑precision processing approximating FP32 accuracy—important for generative AI workloads that balance performance with model fidelity. Partners like SoftBank and Renesas have emphasised the importance of this co‑design approach, blending hardware IP with compiler‑driven software stacks to reduce TCO and accelerate time‑to‑market. Industry analysts see SAKURA‑II and similar accelerators as closing the gap between cloud‑scale AI and embedded edge use cases. By supporting multi‑billion‑parameter models on hand‑held devices, they suggest a future where even small autonomous systems can perform complex tasks like content generation, language parsing and computer vision locally—without connectivity or latency constraints. However, barriers remain. The ~$349 entry price may deter hobbyists and small‑scale developers, contrasted with cheaper model‑specific HAT solutions. Adoption may hinge on use case value—where the benefits of on‑device Generative AI outweigh acquisition and integration costs. Enterprise rollouts will need to consider software support, model compatibility, and real‑world inference benchmarks – details which are pending independent testing. EdgeCortix provides MERA, its compiler and runtime platform, enabling developers to deploy models across heterogeneous Edge AI systems, signalling strong software ecosystem support. This software‑hardware synergy contrasts with many accelerators that must rely on limited driver support or manual optimisation. The extension to Raspberry Pi 5 is significant. As one of the most accessible single‑board computers, Pi 5 offers a global developer base and extensive community support. Pairing it with SAKURA‑II could catalyse novel applications—from mobile robotics and decentralised AI devices to educational platforms that illustrate advanced AI concepts. Going forward, key indicators to watch will include independent benchmark results, broader platform support, and commercial deployments in agriculture, defence, and industrial automation. The ROI calculation will depend on whether the performance and efficiency gains translate into measurable gains—lower energy costs, reduced latency, or enhanced autonomy.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store