In the dozen or so years that the friendly neighbours signed a free trade agreement, Pakistan’s trade deficit of $12 billion has been growing not merely because of the crucial imports needed for the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor projects but also other lesser known factors. The private sector has led the national chorus of calls for removing the existing trade imbalance with China. There are fears that the imbalance itself will fuel a shift from higher to lower productivity. To offset this, Pakistan is hoping to gain the same tariff concessions that China grants Asean states. Only then would Pakistani manufacturers be able to move away from lower productivity to higher productivity and export value-added goods to China.
The idea is to ensure that Chinese industrial initiatives yield the maximum economic benefits for Pakistani stakeholders. One obvious way is to devise industrial activities that have well-defined local stakeholders who help maximise benefits for firms. This is where joint ventures between Pakistani and Chinese companies come in handy. The government needs to take into account which sectors can most benefit from higher productivity and which have the most potential to boost exports.
Published in The Express Tribune, January 26th, 2018.
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