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ISLAMABAD: Experts at a seminar emphasised the need for adaptation of an effective industrial policy, which should go beyond short-term subsidies and focus on productivity enhancement, technological upgrading, worker training, strategic sector support, and active engagement in global value chains.

Speaking at the seminar titled “Industrial Competitiveness in Pakistan” organised by the Pakistan Institute of Development Economics (PIDE) featuring Usman Khan, Deputy Team Lead – REMIT and Director of the Technology for People Initiative (TPI) at LUMS along with Dr Amjad Masood of PIDE they agreed that sustainable economic growth depends on a competitive industrial sector capable of producing goods that meet global standards in both quality and price, remaining integrated into international supply chains.

Dr Amjad Masood, while moderating the event, underscored the critical role of innovation, technology, and industrial transformation in shaping Pakistan’s economic future. He also highlighted lessons from global experience, emphasizing the strategic use of tariffs, foreign direct investment, state-owned enterprises, and public-private dialogue to create globally competitive firms, foster innovation, and drive export growth.

Usman Khan, speaking as the keynote speaker, highlighted that despite the global focus on digitalization and services, manufacturing remains a central driver of economic growth, employment generation, and export competitiveness. He observed that Pakistan, once ahead of countries such as Vietnam, Bangladesh, India, and South Korea in GDP per capita and exports, has gradually lost its economic edge.

Over the past several decades, the industrial sector has stagnated, and labour has shifted directly from agriculture to low-productivity informal services instead of transitioning through manufacturing, a phenomenon he described as premature deindustrialization, adversely affecting youth employment, export diversification, and long-term productivity. Khan noted that Pakistan’s export basket remains narrow and heavily dependent on low-value-added products, particularly textiles and primary commodities, with limited diversification into advanced sectors like electronics and machinery.

He stressed that modern exports are increasingly driven by capabilities and innovation rather than products alone, making human capital development and technical skills critical for competitiveness. The seminar examined structural and policy constraints hindering industrial growth, including high energy costs, policy inconsistency, limited access to credit, burdensome taxation and regulation, low investment in research and development, and weak institutional support.

Khan noted emerging opportunities in sectors such as electric vehicles, where Pakistan can leverage existing capabilities to participate in global production networks without overextending into fully finished product manufacturing. The seminar concluded with an engaging discussion on the future of industrial policy, youth employment, technology adoption, and Pakistan’s path toward a more competitive, diversified, and resilient economy. PIDE reaffirmed its commitment to fostering research, dialogue, and evidence-based policy recommendations to strengthen Pakistan’s industrial base and ensure sustainable economic growth.

Copyright Business Recorder, 2026

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