Sindh Rates Poorly in Household Survey

2 mins read

KARACHI: A recently conducted government-commissioned survey has revealed that Punjab has better education and health facilities compared to other provinces, while Sindh and Balochistan remain the most underdeveloped province in this regard.

These figures come from the Household Integrated Economic Survey 2024-25, conducted by the federal institution, the Pakistan Bureau of Statistics. The survey is carried out every five years; however, this was the first time a digital survey was conducted.

According to the survey data, the overall literacy rate among people aged ten years and above in Pakistan is 63 percent. Punjab has a literacy rate of 68 percent, while Sindh and Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa (K-P) each have a rate of 58 percent. Meanwhile, Balochistan has the lowest literacy rate at 49 percent.

Similarly, the number of out-of-school children aged five to sixteen is highest in Balochistan. According to the survey, 45 percent of children in Balochistan are out of school, compared to 39 percent in Sindh, 28 percent in Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa, and only 21 percent in Punjab. The survey showed that the rate of childhood immunisation was higher in Punjab than in other provinces. In Punjab, 79 per cent of children received complete vaccinations after birth, while the proportion stood at 66 percent in Sindh, 69 percent in Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa (K-P), and 54 percent in Balochistan.

According to the survey, the overall neonatal mortality rate in the country is 35 percent, while the infant mortality rate is 47 percent. A larger proportion of these deaths occur in rural areas, where the rate is 50 per cent, compared to 42 percent in urban areas. The survey does not provide province-wise details for this category.

Surprisingly, Sindh has the highest number of households without toilet facilities. Survey data showed that 14 per cent of households in Sindh lack toilet facilities, compared to 12 per cent in Balochistan, while only five per cent of households in both Punjab and Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa (K-P) lack such facilities. Sindh is also the only province where a higher proportion of rural residents still rely on hand pumps for drinking water compared to other provinces.

According to the survey, 34 percent of people in Sindh use hand pumps and 14 percent use motor pumps. In rural Punjab, 20 percent use hand pumps while 43 percent use water pumps. Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa shows a similar situation, where 12 percent rely on hand pumps and 42 percent on motor pumps. In Balochistan, 8 percent use hand pumps and 21 percent use motor pumps for drinking water.

Taj Mari, President of the National Party in Sindh and a former ruling party leader in Balochistan, opined that the poor condition of basic facilities in Sindh was unacceptable because, after the 18th Constitutional Amendment, the provincial government received substantial resources.

“Despite this, there has been no significant improvement in health, education, and other basic needs. The main reasons are corruption and a lack of merit-based recruitment. Even today, most government departments in the province still offer jobs based on recommendations,” noted Mari. Given that Taj Mari belonged to a rural area of Sanghar district, he was asked why, according to the survey, the largest number of people in rural Sindh still obtained drinking water through hand pumps; reflecting a situation not even seen in Balochistan.

“In many areas, hand pumps are installed merely as political bribes to show that money has been spent, even when there is no real need for them. For example, in my area, underground sweet water is not available, yet many hand pumps have been installed that serve no practical purpose,” said Mari.

The Express Tribune also attempted to obtain a response from Sindh Chief Minister’s spokesperson Abdul Rasheed Channa by sending him a questionnaire via WhatsApp, but no response was received.

News Published in Express Tribune on February 6th, 2026.

Previous Story

Teen Shot Dead in Police Chase

Next Story

Rising Screen Time Causing Vision Problems in children

Latest from Blog

Children at risk

Pakistan has once again found itself in the middle of a rapidly expanding public health challenge: childhood obesity. The latest findings from the World Obesity Atlas 2026 should ideally serve as a wakeup call for our health authorities. Since 2010, the prevalence of obesity among Pakistani children and adolescents has…

Education for Prosperity

Pakistan possesses a demographic profile that could either become its greatest asset or its most destabilising liability. Unfortunately, we are headed in the wrong direction. To understand the scale of the challenge, it is important to recognise the extent of Pakistan’s educational underinvestment. Unesco has advised a minimum of 4-6…

Missing Boy Found Dead in Graveyard

BAHAWALPUR: The Musafir Khana police have recovered the body of a 12-year-old boy from a graveyard in Goth Mehro, around 30 kilometers from the city. The authorities suspect the victim was murdered following a sexual assault. The victim, identified as Muhammad Javed, son of Abdul Hamid, went missing on the…

Starved Childhoods

EVERY day, in homes across Pakistan, millions of children are quietly being left behind. Not by flood or famine, earthquake or epidemic, but by the slow, invisible erosion of chronic undernutrition. The crisis unfolding concerns the 40 percent of Pakistani children under five who are stunted, the nearly 10m children…
Go toTop