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Why iTAP Matters for Pakistan

Published on: February 5, 2026 1:42 AM

February 5, 2026 by Rakhshanda Mehtab

The launch of Pakistan’s first indigenous Index of Transparency and Accountability, the iTAP, in Islamabad on February 3rd, comes at a moment when the national conversation often feels stuck. We talk endlessly about governance, corruption, and trust, but these discussions are usually fueled more by sweeping assertions and deeply held suspicions than by tangible, local evidence. That’s why this initiative, launched by the Federation of Pakistan Chambers of Commerce and Industry in collaboration with Ipsos, feels significant. It isn’t just talking about transparency, it’s attempting to measure it, systematically and from the ground up, offering a pause for genuine reflection based on data rather than rhetoric.

For years, a pervasive narrative has taken hold: that corruption is the default experience in any interaction with the state. The iTAP survey, with its fieldwork conducted at the turn of the year, complicates that story in a profound way. Its initial findings reveal a striking, and perhaps counterintuitive, gap. While public perception remains overwhelmingly negative, a majority of citizens report that their actual, recent dealings with public institutions were free of corruption. This discrepancy is more than a curious statistic; it’s a structural fault line in our public life. When perception becomes so detached from lived experience, it creates a problem that feeds on itself. It erodes trust from within, discourages civic engagement, and can stifle investment, as Federal Minister Ahsan Iqbal noted at the launch, because negative perceptions, left unaddressed, “can undermine national progress and distort realities.” It means that even where genuine improvements are happening, their impact is lost in a fog of pre-existing doubt.

This is where the iTAP moves from being a simple report card to a potential tool for change. By establishing this credible, homegrown baseline, it does two crucial things. First, it identifies the tangible frontier for reform: strengthening transparency and service delivery where it’s needed, yes, but just as critically, addressing the awareness gap and communicating institutional improvements effectively. Governance, as the minister implied, is as much about credible communication as it is about policy. Second, its very design, conceived locally, developed with professional rigour, and planned as a recurring exercise, insulates it from the common critique that such benchmarks are foreign impositions out of touch with local context. It’s our own mirror, reflecting a nationally representative snapshot.

Transparency cannot be a one-off event, and accountability cannot be fostered by a single survey.

There’s a quiet, pragmatic optimism embedded in this effort. By acknowledging that some public institutions have earned higher citizen trust through better service, the index resists the tempting, simplistic narrative of universal failure. It introduces a necessary nuance, acknowledging that progress, however uneven, is possible and being made. For the business community at FPCCI’s core, this is a practical roadmap. Transparency and accountability are not abstract virtues; they are the bedrock of a predictable, business-enabling environment. An objective index that tracks progress is a powerful advocacy tool for targeted reforms that can directly improve Pakistan’s investment outlook.

Ultimately, however, the true measure of iTAP’s value will not be found in this inaugural February morning, but in its continuity. The principle echoed by the minister, that “what gets measured gets improved,” only holds if the measurement is consistent and honest. Transparency cannot be a one-off event, and accountability cannot be fostered by a single survey. If this index is sustained over time, it could evolve from a diagnostic tool into a dynamic part of our civic infrastructure, a gentle, persistent pressure mechanism that rewards improvement, highlights stagnation, and reminds all institutions that their performance is being watched by the citizens they serve.

In a national climate where cynicism can often feel like the default setting, the iTAP represents a tentative step toward a different kind of conversation. It’s a move from accusation toward analysis, from despair toward diagnosis. Building public trust is a long, arduous process, but it must start with a reliable understanding of where we truly stand. This index, if we commit to it, offers that first, crucial benchmark.

The writer is MS Research Scholar at IIUI, a freelance content writer and a columnist.

Filed Under: Op-Ed Tagged With: iTAP Matters, Pakistan

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