The Government of Pakistan has initiated a decisive restructuring of its public cash management system by dramatically expanding the scope of the Treasury Single Account. In a landmark notification issued on Wednesday, the Ministry of Finance detailed an expansive plan to consolidate federal funds, effectively curbing financial fragmentation across various state departments. This move is designed to pool every rupee of federal money into a single consolidated fund by the close of each banking day, ensuring that the state maintains maximum utility over its liquidity. The notification, signed by Section Officer Zain Muneer Kiyani, confirms that 221 federal entities are already integrated into this sweeping arrangement, with another 66 entities now slated for immediate inclusion.
This initiative is rooted in the constitutional mandate provided by Article 78, which dictates that all revenues, loans, and moneys received by the Federal Government must form part of a consolidated fund. To operationalize this, the government has utilized the Cash Management and Treasury Single Account Rules of 2024 to introduce what is known as a sweeping arrangement. This mechanism functions with high precision: idle funds sitting in the bank accounts of various government bodies are automatically transferred to the central consolidated fund at the end of banking hours and returned before the next business day begins. This allows entities to maintain operational liquidity during the day while the state recaptures the overnight float that previously generated returns for commercial banks rather than the public treasury.
The legal architecture supporting this shift is reinforced by the Public Finance Management Act of 2019, which defines the framework for various public entities. Under current rules, the Finance Division holds the authority to extend TSA coverage systematically. While the government has been careful to exempt entities related to national defense and security due to operational sensitivities, almost all other public bodies are now facing mandatory integration. This centralized control is expected to significantly enhance the government’s cash forecasting capabilities, reduce the necessity for expensive short-term borrowing, and tighten oversight of public financial flows.
The list of entities already brought under the TSA umbrella is remarkably diverse, covering everything from the Federal Board of Revenue and the Higher Education Commission to major infrastructure bodies like the National Highway Authority and the Civil Aviation Authority. Regulatory giants such as NEPRA, PEMRA, and the Pakistan Telecommunication Authority are also part of the initial 221-member group. The newly identified batch of 66 entities includes vital organizations like the Securities and Exchange Commission of Pakistan, the Benazir Income Support Programme, and the Drug Regulatory Authority of Pakistan. This wide-reaching integration signifies one of the most significant shifts in Pakistan’s administrative architecture in decades.
Complementing the TSA expansion is a parallel push toward a cashless economy. The government is moving aggressively to shift all government-to-person and person-to-government transactions, including salaries, pensions, and tax collections, onto digital channels. A key long-term goal of this framework is the potential opening of sub-accounts for all public entities directly at the State Bank of Pakistan. If achieved, this would eliminate the need for government bodies to maintain commercial bank accounts entirely, fundamentally altering the liquidity dynamics between the state and the private banking sector. By centralizing billions in overnight funds, the government is transforming a long-standing policy aspiration into a formidable operational reality.
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