Pakistan’s development path is currently categorized by a moderate economic recovery, with a focus on macroeconomic stabilization and operational reforms. While the economy was showing signs of a positive turn, contributing positively towards growth and resilience in agriculture, the improvement in foreign exchange reserves was accompanied by slow economic growth, very high rates of inflation, financial hiccups with external financing, etc. The government is introducing reforms aimed at enhancing investment, productivity, and long-term growth. However, long lasting progress depends on resolving macroeconomic imbalances and maintaining political stability. In Pakistan, the word “progress” is often linked with tall buildings, wider roads, and rising economic indicators. But is that all to explain advancement? True advancement goes beyond concrete and numbers; it shows a society’s ability to uplift its people, protect its environment, and reserve its identity. While Pakistan continues to pursue modernization and growth, the real question is whether this journey is inclusive, sustainable, and meaningful or just a race toward superficial development.
Is progress coming at too high a cost? Let’s dig into the details in this blog.
Modernization in Pakistan a Progress or Illusion?

Have you ever wondered what drives a country toward economic strength? One key factor is strong infrastructure. It forms the backbone of development from roads and transportation to digital systems. In a developing country like Pakistan, however, infrastructure investment remains a costly challenge. Despite some progress over the past decade, sectors like transportation and logistics remain underdeveloped due to years of neglect. With a population of over 250 million, Pakistan still faces sharp rural-urban divides in wealth, services, and access.
Weak infrastructure continues to limit growth and deter investment. Although the government has taken steps to stabilize the economy, deep-rooted problems persist — including rising inequality, tax evasion, and increasing utility costs that burden the poor.
Still, Pakistan’s landscape is changing. Projects like the motorway network and CPEC have improved regional connectivity, created jobs, and attracted foreign investment. Meanwhile, digital initiatives such as e-governance and online banking are transforming how people live and work. These developments promise a more connected and opportunity-rich future — though challenges around inclusivity and sustainability remain.
The Hidden Costs of Development In Pakistan
While development brings economic growth and urban expansion, it also leaves behind a trail of environmental damage, a price often paid by ecosystems and communities with little voice in the process.
Environmental Degradation

Pakistan’s scenic northern regions of Swat, Gilgit-Baltistan, and Chitral are losing their majestic forests at an alarming rate due to unchecked logging, clearing of land for tourism development, and the influence of illicit timber mafias.
The forests in these regions play an important role in:
- Preventing landslides and floods
- Supporting biodiversity
- Regulating climate and water cycles on a local level
It seems that over the last ten years, rates of deforestation have increased rapidly. A Global Forest Watch classification report noted that from 2001 to 2023 Pakistan lost more than 6% of its tree cover. Thick stands of pine tree forests in Swat have lost a great deal of forest cover. Fragile alpine ecosystems and glaciers of GB are becoming more and more threatened. It is ironic that while these areas are now marketed as resorts and destinations to visit, the assets and natural beauty of these regions that visitors are supposed to enjoy is being diminished at a fast rate due to rampant infrastructural development, such as hotels and roads that are often constructed without any Environmental Impact Assessments.
Rapid industrialization has taken a toll on the environment in cities such as Lahore and Faisalabad. Lahore, for example, has gone from being known for its gardens and fresh air to being one of the most polluted cities in the world, even at times of the year such as the winter smog season. This is largely due to effluents from the city’s many brick kilns, steel factories, and transportation emissions. As the government’s tries to end these operations through intermittent crackdowns, there is still little enforcement.
Faisalabad, Pakistan’s textile production hub, already has a considerable untreated industrial waste problem. There are thousands of dyeing and bleaching units across the city that discharge wastewater containing chemicals directly into canals that are subsequently sources of drinking water or irrigation water for agriculture. The continued environmental degradation in cities like Lahore and Faisalabad demonstrates the inherent trade-off between economic activity and environmental quality, a dilemma faced by many developing countries.
Social Displacement

Behind the grand images of contemporary infrastructure and mega projects happening, is a painful truth known as the displacement of individuals who are forced to resign their homes, history, and livelihoods in the name of “national development”. Large-scale infrastructure projects such as dams, highways, and industrial zones demand massive land control. Although these projects promise energy and connectivity, they also displace thousands, and often without just remuneration or some form of rehabilitation.
- One major example is the Diamer-Bhasha Dam, a $14 billion project meant to address Pakistan’s water and energy needs. While it’s a national priority, it will displace over 30,000 people primarily from the Gilgit-Baltistan region many of whom belong to indigenous communities. Generations-old villages, farmlands, and cultural heritage sites are being submerged.
- Similarly, urban expansion in Islamabad, Lahore, and Karachi often leads to forced evictions of low-income settlements to make way for elite housing societies, highways, and commercial developments, deepening inequality.
These displacements are rarely voluntary and compensation, if given, often falls short of restoring people’s dignity or livelihoods.
Loss of Cultural Heritage In Pakistan

In Pakistan’s race to modernize, something invaluable is slipping through the cracks of our cultural heritage. The push to build taller and faster is coming at the expense of centuries-old traditions, architecture, languages, and crafts that once defined who we are in cities like Lahore, the intricate balconies and wooden facades of Mughal-era havelis are disappearing, replaced by glass towers and shopping plazas. In the Walled City, poor heritage management and unchecked commercialization have allowed history to crumble, often without a trace.
The same structure is running across rural Sindh and Balochistan, where beautiful mud houses with frescoes and adorned doors are replaced by ordinary concrete boxes with ugly paneling. These buildings may seem contemporary, but they do little justice to the climate of the area and are devoid of anything resembling traditional design. However, this loss goes beyond architecture. It gets into the voices, hands, and stories of people. The crafts from Multan’s blue pottery, Ajrak printing from Sindh, to Swati embroidery and Peshawari chappals have given way to mass production and fashionable tastes. The artisans, who were the very soul of their communities, now have little option but to abandon their craft for a bare subsistence in economies that by no means value them.
Languages are also quietly fading away. A rich interactive tapestry, Pakistan is home to dozens of indigenous languages, but many languish in the dark. Over 24 languages are considered endangered, including Wakhi, Domaaki, and Brahui, owing to the dynamics of the marketplace according to UNESCO. As these young people position themselves in favor of making an economic living off Urdu or English, the songs, stories, and identity tied to these languages are withering away.
To preserve our intangible heritage means not resisting change, but nurturing the richness that makes us who we are. Our traditions carry the memory of generations. Losing these means losing our sense of self, diversity, and dignity.
Real-World Examples & Case Studies of price of Progress in Pakistan
Pakistan’s journey toward modernization comes along with contradictions and obstacles. While development projects promise progress, they carry deep social, environmental, and cultural costs. Here are some major real-Life examples that explains it all
Margalla Hills encroachments
The Margalla Hills National Park, situated in Islamabad, is supposed to be a green refuge, a protected area and natural habitat for leopards, porcupines, and some rare birds. However, encroachment and invasions of habitat due to construction has been gradually eradicating the habitat.
• Reports of compass violence and that the housing illegal sector, roadside eateries and restaurants, even Government sponsored development, contravene pollution laws.
• Construction hastens erosion, disrupts ecosystems, diminishes the scant green-buffer left with Islamabad struggling with climate warming and pollution.
• The enforcement dilemma has been inconsistent in keeping up with the watchful plead of court orders, impassioned protests from residents; a symptom of the tendency to favour urbanism against nature.
Karachi’s rapid urban sprawl
Karachi, Pakistan’s largest city, has expanded rapidly — but not sustainably. The result is a sprawling, congested metropolis plagued by water shortages, waste mismanagement, and extreme inequality.
- Housing demand has led to the unauthorized development of housing schemes on green belts, wetlands, and agricultural land.
- Traditional neighborhoods have been flattened for commercial plazas, displacing communities and destroying Karachi’s once-diverse architectural and social fabric.
In pursuit of growth, the city is growing outward but not upward, often without proper zoning, planning, or infrastructure creating a concrete jungle that is harder to live in.
Displacement from Diamer-Bhasha Dam
The Diamer-Bhasha project in Gilgit-Baltistan, currently being developed, is to become a central aspect of Pakistan’s energy and water security plan. But for the natives of the areas of Diamer, loss encompasses forced relocation by the state, loss of ancestral land to the river valley flooding, and loss of culture.
- Over 4,000 families will be directly impacted by the project, many thousands more indirectly
- Many archaeological sites and petroglyphs spanning thousands of years will be at the bottom of the dam’s reservoir. This is a loss not just for the region but the planet.
While the dam will undoubtedly provide electricity and irrigation to millions when complete, it raises significant questions about how development can be made more equitable and just.
The Silent Costs of Economic Growth
In Pakistan’s quest of economic progress from CPEC corridors to vertical town expansion, the main narrative has been one of ambition and acceleration. But behind this momentum lie such costs that are often ignored like environmental stress, rising inequality, and fragile institutions. These silent obstacles, if not addressed, can undermine the very progress we seek.
Sustainability and Long-Term Resilience
Historically, Pakistan’s development model has been dominated by pursuit of short-term gains, with overarching importance placed on economic growth, at dear cost to future resilience. Infrastructure projects, industrial growth, and energy projects can often get the green light quicker than another country can consider the environmental implications of their actions.
- Lahore’s smog, Karachi’s water crisis, and land abuse in the northern areas, all demonstrate a regulatory environment that has not aligned growth with sustainability. Rapid development and other construction in these areas means green spaces are depleted quicker than nature can regrow, leading to climate disasters, health problems, and resource depletion.
- Sustainability or to be sustainable is more than just planting a few trees, and having a tree planting campaign once a year or an environmental drive or event for a few seasons. It requires long-term policy reform and planning discipline – and ultimately, it requires a national development philosophy that places environmental stewardship at the core of economic growth, not the end of the checklist of a process.
The Hidden Inequality of Growth
Development in Pakistan is often splintered in terms of geography, economy, and society. Elite housing societies continue to expand even with reductions in informal settlements. Mega-projects lure foreign investors and further uproot local neighborhoods. The profits remain concentrated while the problems multiply.
- Take the Diamer-Bhasha dam investment on the national grid; it is a local community that loses their homes, heritage, and livelihoods.
- Luxury malls and gated communities are now demanded spaces in our urban areas, and neighboring low-income neighborhoods are without any access to clean water, healthcare, and drainage!
- Capital from growth can widen the gaps it is seeking to close without a thoughtful commitment to presence and justice. Equity is a purposeful imperative for sustainable investment, not just a moral issue.
What Real Progress Should Look Like

If Pakistan is to build a future that is truly fair and lasting, it cannot continue repeating the same flawed models of development. We don’t need to stop progress but we do need to guide it. That means focusing on development that is:
- Environmentally sustainable
- Socially inclusive
- Culturally respectful
This shift requires deep policy reforms. Environmental protection must be more than a slogan — it should be backed by strong institutions and strict laws. Environmental Protection Agencies must be empowered, and transparent Environmental Impact Assessments (EIAs) should be mandatory for all major projects. Polluters, deforesters, and land grabbers especially in ecologically sensitive regions like the Margalla Hills or Gilgit-Baltistan must face serious penalties, not just warnings.
Conclusion

Pakistan is at a critical position in its development journey. It is time to step back and ask ourselves uncomfortable questions. We should ask ourselves; is development really ‘development’ at all? While roads, dams, and high-rises can represent progressive indicators, if the costs for these highflying indicators of development include dislocated communities, polluted rivers, lost historical heritage, and growing income disparity, one must wonder. What are we actually ‘building’?
Progress must uplift without uprooting, modernize without erasing, and grow without exhausting. It must include not only our economic goals, but also our environmental obligations, cultural diversity, and social conscience. This is not just the challenge of the policymakers; it is a challenge to every citizen, business, institution, and media outlet, to come together and redefine what we measure as ‘success’. We must push for improved laws, demand transparency, act in solidarity with communities, and protect the things that make Pakistan special; its land, its people, its stories. Development does not have to be this costly. Not unless we start asking, how much have we built; but rather, how well have we built it?