Finance Minister Muhammad Aurangzeb has directed authorities to fast-track the roll-out of three crucial social impact initiatives within weeks, focused on skills development, smallholder farmer financing, and energy efficiency.
The minister gave these directives while chairing meetings to review the progress of work on major government initiatives on Friday.
“The initiatives, each designed to generate measurable social impact and advance national development objectives, are being implemented in close coordination with relevant ministries, regulatory bodies, financial institutions, and technical partners,” read a statement released by the Finance Division.
As per the statement, the first meeting reviewed the Pakistan Skills Impact Bond (PSIB), the country’s first outcomes-based, impact-linked financing instrument to be raised domestically.
Developed under the Social Impact Financing Framework created by a Ministry of Finance-led committee constituted by the Prime Minister, this instrument will serve as the first in a broader programme to mobilise funding from both domestic and international private and philanthropic capital.
All social impact financing will be tied to one or more of the six priority pillars outlined in the Framework and linked to several Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).
The finance minister observed that the PSIB must be positioned as a “trailblazer” that not only meets immediate development needs but also sets a precedent for attracting a more diverse and deeper investor base.
The second meeting focused on the National Subsistence Farmers Support Scheme (NSFSS), a flagship component of the ECC-approved Access to Finance framework for farmers.
The government believes that the NSFSS will unlock digitally enabled, uncollateralized bank loans for smallholder farmers—those owning or cultivating up to 12.5 acres of land, including tenant farmers.
“By leveraging agronomy-related satellite data through the Land Information and Management System (LIMS), banks will integrate this data into their credit scoring models, enabling the provision of loans for agricultural inputs at reasonable mark-up rates, in contrast to the high costs associated with informal lending from middlemen,” read the statement.
It was reported that the State Bank of Pakistan is collaborating with banks and the Pakistan Banks’ Association to operationalise the scheme via a centralised portal developed and managed by the Punjab Information Technology Board (PITB), ensuring an end-to-end digital customer journey.
The finance minister noted that this would be “the first time space technology will be driving agricultural credit decisions on a national scale” and that the initiative represented “a breakthrough moment” for rural financing in Pakistan.
He also pointed out that with 97% of farmers owning less than 12.5 acres as per the latest 7th Agriculture Census, the scheme was directly targeted at the segment most in need of affordable credit, and it would have a transformative impact on rural livelihoods, agricultural productivity, and financial inclusion.
Meanwhile, the third meeting reviewed progress on the Prime Minister’s Fan Replacement Programme, an energy efficiency initiative co-developed by the Power Division’s National Energy Efficiency and Conservation Authority (NEECA) in collaboration with banks.
The programme will enable consumers to replace existing ceiling fans with energy-efficient models at affordable financing rates, with the Ministry of Finance providing a nominal first-loss guarantee to incentivise bank participation.
An online portal, also developed by PITB, will facilitate a fully digital process—from customer onboarding to loan application, fan selection from approved local manufacturers, and loan disbursement and repayment.
Multiple domestic manufacturers of energy-efficient fans have been onboarded and will expand production capacity to meet anticipated demand, contributing to job creation and SME growth.
The Finance Minister emphasised that this initiative was “about more than just replacing fans—it is about embedding energy efficiency into household choices, reducing the national energy footprint, and opening new lending opportunities for SMEs.”
He underscored that linking such projects to SDGs and exploring additional sources of financing would amplify their social and economic impact while helping create sustainable local manufacturing capacity.
Concluding the series of meetings, Aurangzeb observed that each project carried the potential to serve as a model for scale-up, both in Pakistan and internationally, and that delivering them effectively would “signal that Pakistan is ready to innovate, ready to partner, and ready to deliver results that matter for its people.”