Pakistan Exports / Imports - Updates

@Fatman17 sb @Distant_Observer

They are simply unable to make quality products consistently at a good price.

Pak exports seem to have stagnated for ages and even implementation of CPEC and solution to the power woes haven't helped. Seems to be deeply structural issue.

Regards
 
@Fatman17 sb @Distant_Observer

They are simply unable to make quality products consistently at a good price.

Pak exports seem to have stagnated for ages and even implementation of CPEC and solution to the power woes haven't helped. Seems to be deeply structural issue.

Regards
Lacking competitiveness. Poor internal Quality Control and in some cases none.
 
Pakistan exports of goods in 2011 $25bn and $31bn in 2025. Growth couldn't even keep up with inflation. Meanwhile remittances have quadrupled.
 
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Exports miss FY26 target by $4.87bn

Mubarak Zeb Khan
July 3, 2026

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s merchandise exports not only missed the annual target by $4.87bn for FY26, but also contracted, reflecting the PML-N-led coalition government’s failure to achieve visible improvement over the last four years.

The export proceeds also contracted by 5.97pc compared with last year’s $32.04bn.

Furthermore, the trade deficit widened amid a rise in imports and a decline in exports, the Pakistan Bureau of Statistics said on Thursday.

In absolute terms, export proceeds were recorded at $30.13bn in FY26, against the budget-projected target of $35bn. Despite the missed target, the Ministry of Commerce did not issue any statement explaining the decline in exports.


Proceeds contract 6pc year-on-year to $30.13bn; trade gap widens 21.57pc

The declining trend has persisted in recent months, with exports posting negative growth in February and March, followed by a brief recovery in April. Despite this short-lived improvement, exporters remain cautious and do not expect a sustained rebound in export earnings in the near term.

In June, exports dipped 9.61pc to $2.24bn, down from $2.47bn in the corresponding month last year. On a month-on-month basis, export proceeds dipped by 16.73pc.

Negative export growth has continued since August, except in July, when exports grew by 16.43pc year on year. Export earnings posted negative growth, with proceeds declining by 20.41pc in December 2025.

This follows a 14.54pc drop in November, 4.46pc in October, 3.88pc in September, and 12.49pc in August, reflecting persistent pressures on the country’s external trade performance.
 

Pakistan, Turkiye reaffirm $5bn bilateral trade target

  • Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif meets Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan in Istanbul
July 4, 2026
BR Web Desk

Pakistan and Turkiye reaffirmed their commitment to expanding economic cooperation, agreeing to fully leverage the potential of their strategic partnership to achieve a bilateral trade target of $5 billion while further strengthening the longstanding brotherly ties between the two countries.

The development came as Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif met Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan in Istanbul on Saturday.

“Our discussions covered the full spectrum of the Pakistan–Turkiye Strategic Partnership, with particular focus on trade, investment, defence cooperation, energy, connectivity, technology, regional peace, and people-to-people exchanges,” PM Shehbaz wrote in a post on X.
 
"Data shared by Topline Securities, based on SBP figures, shows Pakistan’s total goods and services exports have remained resilient over recent years, rising from $38.5 billion in FY2024 to $40.4 billion in FY2025, with FY2026 expected to close at around $40.1 billion, despite weaker merchandise exports."

So thanks to IT exports growth exports will not fall below $40bn. With bit of push from goods, overall exports can easily cross $45bn this FY.
 
Pakistan has 100 million dirt cheap labour.

They need to manfacture high value items like aerospace parts,heavy machinery and computer parts like motherboards, memory etc.

Issue is the expertise and their inability it seems to get access to it to make this happen.

Look at Slovenia. They have easy access to Europe but Pakistan can do many of this cheaper and at a much higher scale. Vietnam is also a great example. $100 billion just from computer parts.

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A country the size of Pakistan needs to do atleast $350 billion worth of trade. Remittances, IMF and selling vegetables is not going to cut it.
 
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