Why Pakistan is losing the export race — and how it can still win
- Pakistan can still reverse its export slide if policy coherence, technology adoption and sector upgrades align over the next three years
Pakistan’s export competitiveness once again sits at the heart of the macroeconomic debate. While exports hover around the low-to-mid $30 billion mark, the country continues to struggle with rising import pressures and limited foreign exchange inflows. The sustainability of current account and macroeconomic framework increasingly depends on whether Pakistan can engineer a meaningful export revival.
Pakistan’s challenge is not to increase exports marginally but to shift decisively toward higher-value, technologically-enabled products.
Pakistan’s export mix remains dangerously narrow. Knitwear, ready-made garments, bed-wear and rice account for a disproportionate share of total goods exports. These categories matter, but they anchor the country at the lower end of global value chains. Without product diversification and value addition, Pakistan remains exposed to commodity cycles and pricing volatility. Diversification is no longer optional; it is existential.
This problem is compounded by emerging pressure points such as rising production costs, an unpredictable energy regime, logistical inefficiencies that inflate lead times, and shifting buyer expectations that increasingly reward traceability, environmental compliance and technologically integrated supply chains.
The situation is far from hopeless, important openings exist. The rapid uptake of solar energy promises lower medium-term industrial power costs. Pakistan’s IT and digital service exports are gaining momentum. Global supply chain diversification, accelerated by geopolitical shifts, has created opportunities to modernize export ecosystems. The question now is whether Pakistan can bring policy coherence and technological pragmatism to unlock this latent potential.
Why Pakistan is losing ground
Four structural constraints explain why export growth continues to lag behind comparator economies like Vietnam and Bangladesh.
The cost structure of manufacturing remains uncompetitive. High and often unpredictable energy tariffs have long eroded margins for export manufacturers. Although the shift toward solar is promising, industrial energy pricing remains plagued by uncertainty, deterring long-term investment decisions.
Pakistan’s export mix lacks breadth and sophistication. More than three-quarters of export sectors offer limited scope for scale without innovation and automation. Vietnam used targeted FDI attraction and industrial clustering to graduate into electronics and high-technology manufacturing within two decades. It is not an overnight shift to turn things around, it requires strategic decisions and consistent implementation over the period.
Logistics and trade facilitation continue to impose a “Pakistan penalty” on exporters. Along with open corruption at each level, dwell times at ports, inconsistent customs procedures, and paperwork-heavy processes extend lead times. In a world where global buyers source from multiple countries, a two-day delay can mean losing an entire season’s order.
Policy volatility, particularly around taxes, rebates, and industrial incentives raises the risk premium for exporters. Frequent changes make it difficult for firms to plan capital expenditures, diversify product lines, or commit to long-term export contracts.
Learning from the region
There is no need to reinvent the wheel. Successful export economies share three characteristics Pakistan can emulate:
· Consistent, predictable industrial policy that aligns incentives for exporters, investors and regulators.
· Efficient trade facilitation systems that reduce time-to-market and minimise paperwork.
· A focus on upgrading, not just expanding, factory capabilities, from compliance and design to automation and R&D.
Bangladesh’s garment sector, for example, scaled not simply because of low labour costs but due to sustained improvements in compliance, predictable policy, and dedicated export-oriented infrastructure. Vietnam’s success shows how clustering, foreign investment, and technology integration can lift an entire export ecosystem.
Pakistan can chart a similar path, in a much faster pace, with adaptations to local strengths and constraints. A realistic export revival strategy must be disciplined, measurable, and achievable within 12–36 months.
Below is a five-point plan that balances policy reform, cost reduction and technology adoption.
1. Make exports the anchor of industrial policy
Pakistan needs an “Export Competitiveness Council” that aligns the actions of commerce, finance, energy, IT and provincial departments. Quarterly KPIs, port dwell times, export diversification, value addition and FDI inflows can enforce accountability.
2. Remove logistical bottlenecks through full digitisation
Pakistan’s Single Window (PSW) is a promising initiative, but it must expand rapidly. End-to-end digitisation of customs, e-certificates, e-bills of lading, and risk-based inspection lanes can cut clearance times significantly. Even a 20–30 percent reduction in dwell times would materially improve competitiveness, especially for textiles, leather, agro and IT-enabled services.
3. Build sector upgrades through clusters and compliance support
To transition from low-value to higher-value exports, Pakistan must support factories in adopting automation, quality certification, sustainable production and design capabilities. Export-oriented clusters - each with shared labs, logistics services, training facilities and financing desks can dramatically reduce costs for SMEs. Public-private partnerships are key here, not large budgetary outlays.
4. Reform incentives to reward value addition, not volume
Instead of broad tax exemptions or ad-hoc rate changes, Pakistan should provide incentives tied to value added per unit, local supply chain development, and technological upgrading. Exporters investing in automation, energy efficiency, or R&D should receive accelerated depreciation, lower financing costs and stable, multi-year incentive frameworks.
5. Build a Parallel Engine - Scale IT and Digital Services Exports
Pakistan’s IT/ICT exports have shown strong growth but require a clearer scaling strategy. Export zones for software firms, tax clarity for freelancers, improved regulatory processes for remittance handling, and easier visas for foreign clients and technical talent are core components.
Blockchain, AI and digital finance are not buzzwords. Used properly, they can transform the future of Pakistan.
A permissioned blockchain system for certificates of origin, phytosanitary certificates and shipping documents can eliminate fraud and reduce verification delays abroad. This is particularly relevant for rice, leather, fruits and surgical instruments, where international buyers increasingly demand verified provenance.
The key is to pursue these technologies through public-private pilots that demonstrate return on investment — not expensive, large-scale, untested rollouts.
The fundamentals for an export resurgence exist, an adaptable workforce, strong textile heritage, rising solar adoption, and an emerging tech sector. What has been missing is alignment. A coherent export strategy, backed by predictable policy and pragmatic technology deployment, can help reposition Pakistan in global supply chains.
If the country reduces logistical friction, stabilises incentives, modernises factories and scales its digital services sector, the next five years could see not just higher export earnings but a more diversified, resilient and value-added export economy.
Pakistan’s export challenge is structural but it is solvable. The window for action is open; what is needed now is clarity, coordination and commitment.
Dr. Ajaz Ali is a British-Pakistani academic and education reform advocate who leads Higher Education at a Birmingham-based institution. Holding an MBA and PhD, he is recognised for promoting meaningful education for success in an AI-powered world. He tweets at @DrAjazUK