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Reverse Robin Hood

July 20, 2025
The undated image shows a labourer carrying a sack of refined sugar. —APP/File
The undated image shows a labourer carrying a sack of refined sugar. —APP/File

Robin Hood, the legendary outlaw who stole from the rich and gave to the poor, left behind a tale rich with meaning. At its core, it carried three powerful messages: a call for justice, a stand against corrupt power and a vision of wealth being redistributed to those most in need.

Welcome to the Land of the Pure, where we’ve institutionalised the exact opposite: a Reverse Robin Hood. We’ve built a system that extracts from the poor and middle class to protect the privileges of the powerful. It’s a system where the poor fund the rich, and the powerless subsidise the powerful. An economy where wealth flows upward instead of downward. A structure designed to take from the many to benefit the few. A setup where those with the least carry the burden for those with the most, draining the poor to preserve the lifestyles of the privileged.

Between July and May of FY2024–25, Pakistan exported 765,734 metric tonnes of sugar and earned Rs114 billion. Now, we’re importing roughly the same amount, but at a cost of Rs198 billion. That’s a staggering loss of Rs84 billion. In plain terms: every Pakistani family will pay Rs2,500 out of pocket so that 84 sugar mill owners can pocket Rs1 billion each. If that’s not Reverse Robin Hood in action, what is?

There are roughly 40 million electricity meters in the country, and about 40 large-scale and 70 small to mid-sized Independent Power Producers (IPPs). We’ve engineered a system that drains the last rupee from ordinary consumers to feed the ever-hungry IPP beasts. If that’s not Reverse Robin Hood in action, what is?

Since 1956, Pakistan has seen 14 presidents and 31 prime ministers. We've cycled through parliamentary democracy (1947–1958), military authoritarianism (1958–1971, 1977–1988, 1999–2008), civilian rule with authoritarian overtones (1971–1977), flawed democracies (1988–1999, 2008–2018), and now, hybrid regimes (2018–2025). And yet, through every transition, one thing has remained constant: the Reverse Robin Hood Economic Model, taking from the many to protect the privileges of the few.

Pakistan’s Reverse Robin Hood Economic Model, impervious to regime transitions, robs the poor to enrich the elite. Pakistan’s Reverse Robin Hood Economic Model has deepened inequality. It has stifled innovation. It has discouraged entrepreneurship. It has limited human capital development. It fuels instability. And it has pushed 45 per cent of the population below the poverty line.

We continue to operate within a framework that protects privilege, rewards inefficiency and exploits the many for the benefit of the few. Whether under elected governments, military rule or hybrid regimes, the core fundamentals have remained stubbornly unchanged: the system drains the majority to enrich a minority, and bleeds the masses to sustain the elite.

It is time for a doctrinal pivot. Pakistan’s Reverse Robin Hood economic model – consistent across democratic, authoritarian and hybrid regimes – has outlived its moral and economic legitimacy.

Pakistan has to escape its recurring cycles of crisis. The old playbook, the Reverse Robin Hood Economic Model, must be abandoned. The future lies not in protecting the status quo, but in dismantling it.


The writer is a columnist based in Islamabad. He tweets/posts @saleemfarrukh and can be reached at: [email protected]