Pakistan’s digital credit problem is not access, it’s what the money is funding

Over the past few years, Pakistan witnessed a noteworthy growth in making digital credit more accessible. Nano-lending apps, Buy Now, Pay Later (BNPL) platforms, Early Wage Access and merchant financing solutions emerged and grew rapidly, supported by smartphone penetration and regulatory licensing. Theoretically, it signals financial inclusion moving forward. But a harder question remains largely unexamined: What is digital credit actually being used for once it reaches the customer? Because accessibility alone does not equal impact and in Pakistan’s case, it may be quietly masking deeper financial distress. Access has improved but financial stress hasn’t. The focal point of these ventures are approvals, disbursement volumes, and repayment rates. These metrics are crucial but they do not capture borrower reality. Practically, a significant portion of short-tenor digital credit is being used for survival liquidity rather for productivity, asset building, or consumption smoothing, but for survival liquidity. Three recurring behavioral patterns stand out across Pakistan’s fintech ecosystem. 1. Loans Used to Repay Other Loans One of the most common but least discussed behaviors is loan recycling.** The borrowers exhibiting such behavior take a loan from one nano-lending app to repay another, not because income improved, but because repayment deadlines overlap. This creates a silent debt spiral where repayment rates appear healthy; defaults are delayed, not avoided; and borrowers accumulate psychological and financial stress. From a reporting perspective, portfolios look like they are “performing” but from a human perspective, this is structured dependency, not inclusion. 2. Digital Credit Fueling Online Gambling Addiction A second, more alarming, trend is the use of digital credit for online betting and gambling apps. Easy access to instant loans combined with aggressive gambling platforms has created a dangerous loop: borrow → gamble → lose → borrow again. This is no longer anecdotal. Field signals consistently show multiple loans taken within days; erratic transaction sizes and repeated borrowing without income correlation. This is not just a fintech issue, it is a consumer protection and financial stability issue. Yet today, there is almost no mechanism to detect or intervene when credit flows into clearly harmful use cases. 3. BNPL Purchases Resold for Cash In BNPL, especially mobile phone financing, another signal is becoming increasingly visible: resale behavior. Customers buy phones on instalment, pay a down payment, then sell the device in the open market at a %5–10% loss within days. This indicates that accessibility to convenient mobile phone purchase was never the motive behind the borrowing, it was liquidity. This behavior tells us that formal short-term cash options are insufficient; credit products are mismatched with real needs; and customers are using assets as cash converters Pakistan has built the rails for digital credit. But are we ready to take responsibility for where that credit leads? Again, repayment may still happen, but at the cost of deeper financial fragility. High repayment rates are often presented as proof that digital credit is working. But repayment does not always mean affordability. In Pakistan’s digital lending ecosystem, repayments are frequently supported by another loan; asset liquidation or informal borrowing This keeps portfolios afloat while pushing risk downstream, onto households and informal networks. To its credit, Pakistan has moved to license digital lenders and clean up the market. But regulation has largely focused on who can lend, not how credit behaves after disbursement. What remains missing is ecosystem-level visibility: loan stacking detection; harmful-use monitoring and post-disbursement behavioral analytics. Without this layer, systemic risks will remain invisible until they surface as social or political crises. The Next Phase: Outcome-Led Digital Credit Pakistan does not need less digital credit. It needs better designed credit. That means products aligned to real liquidity needs; early warning systems based on behavior, not just repayment; stronger coordination between lenders, wallets, and regulators; and consumer protection mechanisms for addiction-driven borrowing. Financial inclusion is not about how fast money moves. It is about whether money actually improves financial stability. A question worth asking is: Pakistan has built the rails for digital credit. But are we ready to take responsibility for where that credit leads? The future of fintech will not be decided by approval numbers but by whether digital credit becomes a ladder out of stress, or a faster loop inside it.