Pakistan’s latest National Corruption Perception Survey finds a clear uptick in public optimism, with 66 per cent of respondents saying they paid no bribes this year. Over half believe the economy is stabilising, and more than 40 per cent report improvements, albeit marginal, in their purchasing power. These are not insignificant markers in a country fatigued by inflation, political turbulence and institutional drift. Taken at face value, they suggest that recent policy tightening, from IMF-mandated fiscal discipline to compliance with global monitoring regimes, is beginning to restore some public confidence.
But optimism is not the same as transformation. Scratch beneath the upbeat headlines, however, and Pakistan’s structural realities remain bleak. On the global stage, the country still scores a dismal 27 out of 100 on Transparency International’s Corruption Perceptions Index, placing it among the least trusted systems in the world. At home, the usual suspects continue to dominate the graft rankings: the police, procurement departments and segments of the judiciary. The modest 6% improvement in policing perceptions underscores how slowly reputations shift when practices remain largely unchanged.
The public, for its part, is not fooled. An overwhelming majority remains dissatisfied with the official anti-corruption drive, and nearly eight in ten Pakistanis want watchdogs such as NAB and FIA placed under independent oversight. This is the loudest verdict in the entire report: people are weary of the arbitrariness that has long hollowed out accountability. They want the watchers to watch.
Even more telling are the reform preferences citizens themselves have articulated. Most want corporate funding of political parties banned outright; a demand that goes to the very heart of elite capture. Others seek tighter accountability rules, curbs on discretionary official powers, stronger Right-to-Information laws and robust whistleblower protections. These calls reflect a sophisticated public diagnosis: corruption in Pakistan is systemic, not episodic. It is embedded in political finance, procurement loopholes, legal ambiguity, and the everyday opacity of state offices.
Parliament’s approval of a whistleblower protection law is a step in the right direction, but only that. Without proper implementation, it will join the long shelf of laws that look impressive on paper and languish in practice. The fact that most Pakistanis do not even know how to report corruption speaks volumes about the distance between legislation and lived experience.
This perception that provincial governments are more corrupt than the federal centre – with Punjab and Sindh often singled out – exposes the unevenness of governance across the federation. Any serious reform plan must confront this provincial landscape rather than pretend corruption is a single-centred phenomenon.
What Pakistan has today is not a success story, but an opportunity. The survey’s modest improvements in sentiment can either become a foundation for genuine reform or be squandered as political self-congratulation. It would be a national failure not to turn it into meaningful change. *