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Pakistan textile exports decline in last 3 yrs

byghadia
17/11/2015
in Business
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KARACHI: Pakistan’s textile exports have been declining during the last three years.

Pakistan’s textile industry has suspended its several month long agitation for solid business demands as the government promised help to boost production and exports at reduced prices.

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The government has accepted three out of the eight demands of the industry. But the industry while welcoming this gesture announced that it will continue to agitate for the acceptance of the rest of the demands. The three accepted demands are:

One, raising the regulatory customs duty on import of Indian cotton yarn and fabric-coarse cloth from the present five per cent to 25 per cent – but the government raised it only to 10 per cent, effective from November 1.

“Textile industry is hopeful that the rest of the eight demands will soon be considered favourably, and resolved by the government for the viability of the industry and increasing exports off the country,” All Pakistan Textile Manufacturers Association (Aptma), the industry leader, said in a statement.

The industry and business analysts insist that its products ranging from high value fashion garments to common textiles are enjoying a big boom in markets ranging from the UAE to EU, but it still has to lower its cost of doing business in order to reduce the sale price of its products in the export markets.

The industry has been encouraged by its recent holding fashion shows in the UAE, Middle East, EU and elsewhere.

Pakistani fashions and designers are vigorously competing in countries across the globe, ranging from top fashion designer names from France to India and Japan to China.

The credit for bringing the industry back to production followed the latest, Pakistan-wide shut down of all textile industrial factories and allied manufacturing and processing units across the country. Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif’s pro-business policies and a team of his three negotiators conceded some of the demands. The negotiators included Finance Minister Ishaq Dar, Commerce Minister Khurrum Dastgir Khan and Haroon Akhtar Khan, Special Assistant to Prime Minister on Revenue.

Finance Minister Dar says: “We need more revenues and rapidly enlarge our forex earnings to expand nationwide development work and repay foreign loans. But we have chosen to help the textile industry as it is the biggest labour employer and foreign exchange earner through exports.”

“The export trajectory will now start moving up – making me and the country happy,” said Dastgir Khan as textile industry opened the factories after the one-day nationwide strike.

“You know, I come in middle of the crossfire because the industry demands a cut down on costs of production and government demands to push exports up,” Dastgir said.

The seriousness of the textile industry crisis can be gauged from the fact that its exports have been declining during the last three years – down to a level of around $13 billion a year. Still its significance is that it makes a big chunk of the overall total annual exports, which have also been stagnating at around $24 billion a year. Besides the big role of earning foreign exchange, textile industry is the biggest employer of labour, the largest tax-payer and consumer of most of its 12 to 13 million bales of its home grown cotton. The official statistics indicate that the overall Pakistani textile exports in financial year 2014-15 were down 10 per cent as compared to 2013-14. Even in first quarter of 2015-16 – July-September 2016, the exports were down 14 per cent.

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