Pakistan Bets Rs. 16.29 Billion on IT Parks and AI in 2026-27 Budget

Pakistan’s 2026-27 PSDP allocates Rs. 16.29 billion for IT parks, AI, and digital economy projects. The funding targets infrastructure and skills, but gaps in execution and regional equity remain.

By Inside AI June 15, 2026
AI neural network visualization

June 15, 2026, (Inside AI) — Pakistan’s federal government has earmarked Rs. 16.29 billion for ongoing IT and telecom projects in the Public Sector Development Program (PSDP) 2026-27. The move signals a deliberate push to fortify digital infrastructure and nurture innovation hubs across the nation.

The allocation, detailed in budget documents, is not a sudden pivot. It underscores a multi-year strategy to reposition Pakistan as a competitive player in the global tech economy. But the funding mix raises questions about execution capacity and regional equity.

Flagship Tech Parks Command the Largest Share

The Technology Park Development Project in Islamabad will absorb Rs. 6.81 billion. Billed as a cornerstone initiative, it aims to house startups, tech firms, and entrepreneurs under one roof. A separate Karachi IT Park gets Rs. 3.75 billion. Together, these two projects consume nearly two-thirds of the proposed outlay.

Infrastructure spending of this scale is rare in Pakistan’s tech sector. The last comparable push was the Software Technology Parks in the early 2000s. Those projects struggled with maintenance and tenant acquisition. Officials now insist lessons have been learned.

Digital Economy and AI Get Targeted Boosts

A World Bank-backed initiative, the Digital Economy Enhancement Project, will receive Rs. 3.02 billion. Its mandate is to digitize public services and widen economic access. The National Artificial Intelligence Advancement Initiative has been allocated Rs. 524.64 million. That figure, while modest globally, marks a formal entry into AI policy funding.

“We are not trying to compete with Silicon Valley,” said a senior IT ministry official who requested anonymity. “We are building foundational capacity that can later attract private investment.”

Critics argue the AI allocation is too small to make a dent. Dr. Ayesha Khan, a Lahore-based tech policy analyst, countered: “Without a clear AI governance framework, even half a billion rupees could be wasted on fragmented pilot projects.”

Cybersecurity and Semiconductor Training Get Attention

Cybersecurity efforts will see Rs. 330 million channeled into the Cyber Security for Digital Pakistan project. The National Semiconductor Human Resource Development Program will receive Rs. 250 million. Both are niche but critical areas where Pakistan has minimal existing footprint.

The semiconductor allocation is particularly noteworthy. Global chip talent shortages have pushed nations like India and Vietnam to invest heavily. Pakistan’s entry, however late, aligns with a broader trend of workforce development in chip design and fabrication.

Regional Connectivity and Smart City Ambitions

The PSDP also funds cellular expansion in Azad Jammu and Kashmir (AJK) and Gilgit-Baltistan (GB). The Smart Islamabad Initiative will receive a slice of the pie. These projects aim to bridge the digital divide and modernize urban governance.

Yet, past connectivity projects in northern areas faced delays due to terrain and security issues. The government has not disclosed how it plans to mitigate these risks this time.

Total Portfolio and Unanswered Questions

The overall cost of ongoing IT and telecom projects stands at Rs. 79.79 billion. The Rs. 16.29 billion proposed for 2026-27 is a fraction of that. The budget documents do not specify timelines for completion or expected job creation numbers.

Some industry voices welcome the continuity. Ali Raza, CEO of a Karachi-based fintech startup, said: “Stable funding for tech parks gives us confidence to lease space and hire locally.” Others worry about bureaucratic bottlenecks that have historically delayed disbursements.

The Revamping of IT Industry project, allocated Rs. 1 billion, remains vaguely defined. Without clear metrics, it risks becoming a slush fund, warned a former planning commission member.

As Pakistan navigates economic headwinds, the tech budget is a bet on long-term gains. Its success will hinge on transparent execution and private sector uptake.

More from Inside AI

  • Agentic AI

    Genesis AI Unveils Eno: A Non-Humanoid Robot with Human-Level Dexterity

    June 20, 2026
  • Artificial Intelligence (AI)

    SpaceX IPO Ignites Investor Frenzy for Orbital AI Data Centers

    June 20, 2026
  • Agentic AI

    Pinterest Debuts AI Business Assistant, Agentic Protocol, and Ask Pinterest App

    June 20, 2026
  • Artificial Intelligence (AI)

    Maharashtra Inks Free AI Training Deal with Google for 400,000 Teachers

    June 20, 2026
  • Artificial Intelligence (AI)

    Respond.io Raises $62.5M to Dominate Mid-Market Customer Conversations

    June 20, 2026
  • Artificial Intelligence (AI)

    Norway Bans AI for Young Students, Restricts Use for Teens

    June 20, 2026
  • Generative AI

    Anthropic Blackout Exposes AI Governance Crisis: Who Controls Frontier Models?

    June 20, 2026
  • Generative AI

    Norway Bans AI in Elementary Schools: Inside the New Policy

    June 19, 2026

Never Miss a Breakthrough

Join 50,000+ readers who get our daily AI intelligence briefing. No fluff, just what matters.

Inside AI is an independent publication covering artificial intelligence news, machine learning research, and the tools shaping the future of technology. No fluff. No hype. Just what matters.

Topics

  • Artificial Intelligence
  • Machine Learning
  • Generative AI
  • Agentic AI
  • Vibe Coding
  • Prompt Engineering
  • AI Tools & Reviews (Coming soon)

Company

  • Editorial Standards
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Service
  • Contact

© 2026 Inside AI. All rights reserved.

Designed by Blue Flare Digital