The Evolution of Urban Governance and External Financing in Pakistan (A Tale of Two Infrastructure Models)

Authors

  • Nusrat Azeema Department of Sociology, School of Public Administration, Hohai University
  • Li Yi Department of Sociology, School of Public Administration, Hohai University
  • Sita Chaudhary Department of Sociology, School of Public Administration, Hohai University

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.59890/ijefbs.v3i6.270

Keywords:

Urbanization, Pakistan, Finance, Loan

Abstract

The urban administration in Pakistan has transformed as a result of political and economic shifts. The urban government in Pakistan has been influenced by external financing, which is a reflection of institutional reforms, fiscal decentralization, and the priorities of global development. Over the course of the last three decades, Pakistan's urban management has transitioned from a centralized bureaucratic authority to fragmented local governance systems that are shaped by donor-driven projects and conditional cash inflows. An in-depth analysis of how multilateral development banks and bilateral aid influence urban policy, infrastructure, and service delivery is presented in this specific piece of writing. The evidence demonstrates that the use of external financing has hastened the process of urban modernization while simultaneously exacerbating governance problems such as policy incoherence, accountability deficiencies, and socio-spatial inequities. In this study, political economics research and urban planning perspectives are combined in order to investigate how external funding mechanisms influence the capacities of local governments and the transformation of urban infrastructure in Pakistan's fast-growing cities. The findings highlight the necessity of having governance structures that are adaptable and, in a position, to strike a balance between local interests and global urban finance strategy.

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Published

2026-01-06