Pakistan ranks 16th in global talent index
Pakistan has risen to 16th place in the Global Outsourcing Talent Index 2026, surpassing 177 countries, according to a report by Ataraxis Management. This places the country in the top 8.3% of global digital labour markets and highlights strong performance in talent availability, where it outperforms several established European and Asian economies. However, the data reveals a dangerous "infrastructure-talent gap" that threatens to derail this momentum if not addressed with more than just verbal promises.
The most striking aspect of the Ataraxis report is a sharp disparity between Pakistan's resilient freelancers and weak state support, with a 97/100 cost competitiveness score and 8th-ranked talent availability driven by self-taught skills in AI, blockchain and digital services. Notably, Pakistan outranks China, Vietnam, Germany, France, Spain and the UK overall, but scores only 30/100 for infrastructure, tied with Nigeria, and faces a 67-point cost-infrastructure gap, among the widest in the index.
This suggests that Pakistan's current success is not because of its domestic ecosystem, but in spite of it. The "digital labour" fuelling this 16th-place ranking is effectively operating as an island, disconnected from the systemic inefficiencies that plague the rest of the country.
"Pakistan has the talent to lead globally, but without enabling infrastructure and financing, we risk becoming a supplier of skills instead of a creator of value. If addressed strategically, Pakistan can convert global recognition into long-term economic advantage, transitioning from a talent exporter to a technology powerhouse," Si Global CEO Dr Noman A Said told The Express Tribune. He added that Pakistan's rising visibility in global talent indices highlights both opportunity and risk. While it reflects strong growth in technology, freelancing and digital services, it also increases exposure to relocation pressures from countries like Canada, Germany and the United Arab Emirates (UAE). Structural challenges remain, especially weak digital infrastructure (30/100) and limited access to financing for IT exporters and freelancers. Unlike mature ecosystems such as the Philippines, Pakistan lacks scalable, service-oriented funding models.
However, Pakistan Software Houses Association for IT and ITES (P@sha) Chairman Sajjad Syed commented that Pakistan's technical training system, universities and industry-led grooming are producing a steadily growing pool of skilled professionals, strengthening its position in outsourcing across BPO, software development and emerging AI services. Technology companies play a key role by offering real project experience, which improves practical skills and industry readiness. While concerns about brain drain exist, especially due to opportunities abroad in countries like Germany and Canada, it is not seen as an immediate crisis because Pakistan has a large and continuously growing youth population.
Vulnerability of being at 16th
A critical concern lies in the sustainability of this ranking. The report clearly states that if Pakistan's infrastructure score were to move from 30 to just 50, the country would rise to 11th place globally. Conversely, current stagnation acts as a ceiling. While countries like Vietnam, the Philippines and even neighbouring India are aggressively subsidising high-speed fibre-optic expansion, despite the recent addition of 5G connectivity, Pakistan remains entangled in frequent internet slowdowns, localised firewalls and inconsistent power supply.
When a "talent powerhouse" lacks reliable electricity and unrestricted data flow, "cost competitiveness" begins to erode. For global clients, the 10-to-1 cost saving is attractive, but the risk of project delays due to connectivity blackouts is increasingly becoming a deal-breaker.
Brain drain threat
There is also the looming ghost of the "digital brain drain". As Pakistani professionals gain international recognition through global indices, they become prime targets for relocation programmes in tech-hungry nations like Germany, Canada and the UAE. Without a stable local environment that offers more than just "low-cost living", Pakistan risks becoming a nursery that grows talent only for other nations to harvest.
Call for structural reform
Pakistan's 16th ranking in the Global Outsourcing Talent Index 2026 is a major milestone but also a warning. The country ranks in the top 20 globally, driven by a labour cost score of 97/100, slightly higher than India (96), yet still 13 places lower overall. Despite stronger cost competitiveness than Nigeria and Egypt (98), Pakistan's talent availability score of 80 ranks 8th globally, ahead of Malaysia, Poland and Colombia. However, weak infrastructure is limiting growth despite matching English proficiency (60/100) with India and China. If the state cannot provide the basic digital utility to match the brilliance of its people, the 16th-place ranking will remain a fragile peak rather than a foundation for the future.
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