Freelancing has emerged as a transformative dimension of Pakistan’s economy, redefining labor market participation and contributing significantly to foreign exchange earnings. This study examines the rise of freelancing in Pakistan, assessing its economic impact on employment, income, and development through the synthesis of secondary data from the State Bank of Pakistan, Payoneer reports, industry surveys, and policy documents. The findings reveal that Pakistan’s freelancers generated approximately US396 million in export revenue in FY2021–22, accounting for nearly 15% of the country’s ICT service exports. By FY2024–25, freelance remittances are projected to exceed US530 million, underscoring freelancing’s growing role as a stabilizing force in the external account. Beyond macroeconomic significance, freelancing has created new employment avenues in a context of high youth unemployment and limited industrial absorption. Estimates suggest the sector has directly generated over 100, 000 jobs, with many freelancers transitioning into micro-agencies, thereby multiplying employment effects. Income levels, however, vary sharply by skill. While accessible categories such as graphic design, writing, and data entry provide modest earnings, high-demand niches like SEO, e-commerce, and web development yield several times higher annual incomes. This stratification highlights the importance of upskilling and specialization. Importantly, freelancing expands inclusion: Pakistani women, though only 15–25% of freelancers, often earn equal or slightly higher hourly rates than men, a reversal of global gender gaps. Remote work also enables participation from semi-urban and rural areas, reducing barriers linked to mobility and cultural constraints. The study concludes that freelancing represents both opportunity and vulnerability. Its potential to contribute billions in export earnings, reduce unemployment, and support Sustainable Development Goals is evident, but structural challenges persist. Weak digital infrastructure, limited payment gateways, high energy costs, and fragile governance frameworks constrain sustainable growth. Targeted policy action, investments in broadband, financial reforms, training in high-value skills, and social protection measures, are essential for Pakistan to fully harness freelancing’s promise as a pillar of inclusive digital development.
Afzal et al. (Wed,) studied this question.