Trump Announces Major Pakistan Trade Deal, Vows Joint Oil Development/Exploration

Believe me, I too have worried about Pakistan going so deep into the China camp that Pakistan may not be able to come to some 'just peace' with India in future even if that future is nowhere on the horizon right now.
China has been good for Pakistan and vice versa and may that remain like that. But China is not a true 'neighbor' of Pakistan: A tiny sliver of shared border through a very hostile climate. India shares a long border with Pakistan and a long history as well as considerably many things more than Pak China share. And we should never lose sight of those aspect of the three countries despite all the good and bad we see now.

Apart from being ruled by the british, modern day Pakistanis share very LITTLE with modern day indians. Some indians speak a similar language to what Pakistanis speak but that's about it. This so called "commonality" between Pakistanis and indians is simply hindutva propaganda.

How can Pakistan EVER have peace with india when indians believe in the total destruction of the Pakistani nation and people? Our relationship with China does not change this whatsoever.
 
“The Government of Pakistan looks forward to further positive engagements and close cooperation with the United States in the areas of investment, artificial intelligence, cryptocurrency, mines & minerals, energy, and other emerging sectors.

“Pakistan will continue to engage closely with President Trump and the US administration to promote the shared goals of economic development and mutual prosperity,” the statement asserted.

It appreciated the “constructive engagement” of the US authorities and acknowledged the valuable role played by its team, including the commerce ministry and the Pakistan Mission in Washington DC, and other public and private sectors stakeholders.

In a recorded video statement, Aurangzeb said he and his team had a “very constructive final round of discussions” with US Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick and Trade Representative Jamieson Greer, which the “led to finalising the trade deal”.

“Trade and investment have to go hand in hand,” the finance czar stressed, adding that the “bilateral and strategic partnership has come up prominently”.

Giving insights on the process, the minister pointed out the private sector’s role as it was the “first constituent” to volunteer in helping to reduce the trade imbalance.

Terming it a “win-win situation” again for the future, Aurangzeb said: “I think we are in a good place today […] in terms of where we have arrived before August 1.”
 
Pakistan has emerged with the second-lowest tariff rate of any South Asian country. Afghanistan got hit with a 15pc levy, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka and Vietnam with 20pc, and India with 25pc.

CNN noted: “There is also satisfaction locally that Pakistan’s tariff rate is much lower than neighbour and arch-rival India’s. Fears in Islamabad that India was trying to isolate Pakistan financially have been somewhat tempered by the 25pc tariff rate that the Trump administration hit New Delhi with.”

Meanwhile, the Pakistan Stock Exchange (PSX) maintained its bullish momentum and crossed the 141,000-point barrier, despite dipping by as many as 433 points in the morning.

The benchmark KSE-100 index rose by 1,644.56 points (1.18pc) to reach a intraday high of 141,160.93 points at 4:11pm, from the previous close of 139,390.42 points. It finally closed at 141,034.98 points.

Having witnessed heavy selling pressure on Tuesday due to corporate earnings and political noise, the PSX had bounced back above the 139,000-mark yesterday, driven by the trade agreement with the US.



This screengrab shows PSX activity on August 1. — PSX data portal


Adviser to the Finance Minister Khurram Schehzad highlighted on X: “Pakistan is possibly the only country which the US has offered its investments as well, besides a competitive trade deal.”

He noted the “deal signals a strategic deepening of economic ties and shared growth”.

Speaking to Geo News, Schehzad expanded upon possible US investment in Pakistan’s energy sector, which he termed the “biggest area” in the economy.

“We need global partnerships in energy. We import 80-90pc of all our energy needs,” the finance minister’s adviser observed.

“If such an economy — a giant which has expertise in oil and gas — if they’re coming and talking about massively building oil and gas reserves, so we can export to the entire region, not just fulfil our own needs, this is a big development,” the adviser emphasised.

“If Pakistan make a deal with the US to set up big plants for exploration or machinery, we’ll get benefits in tariffs through that as well,” he added.

“The way Pakistan has been treated compared to different countries in this region, very encouraging and important,” Schehzad said, referring to the higher 25pc levy imposed on India.

While noting that the government’s role was to negotiate and secure a good deal, he called on the private sector to execute it through business-to-business, export contracts, and export engagement.

“The import bill can be reduced, the dollar can be impacted, overall employment generation, and GDP can be improved,” Schehzad highlighted.

He pointed out that the Pakistani companies, such as Oil and Gas Development Company Limited (OGDCL) and the Pakistan Petroleum Limited (PPL), were stakeholders in Balochistan’s Reko Diq mining project.
 
Some of them had reached tariff-reducing deals; others had no opportunity to negotiate with his administration. Trump included an exception for some goods shipped within the coming week.

Goods from all other countries not listed would be subject to a 10pc US import tax. Trump had previously said that the rate might be higher.

The administration also teased that more trade deals were in the pipeline as it seeks to close trade deficits and boost domestic factories.

According to the executive order, if a trading partner fails to take “adequate steps” to address the tariffs or retaliates against the US, the commerce secretary and trade representative, in coordination with the appropriate senior officials, shall recommend additional action.

Facing a Friday deadline of his making, the Republican president has tapped emergency powers, pressured foreign leaders, and pressed ahead with trade policies that sparked a market sell-off when they were first announced in April.

This time, markets had a more muted reaction. Stocks and equity futures fell modestly in Friday morning trading in Asia.

Trump’s order said that some trading partners, “despite having engaged in negotiations, have offered terms that, in my judgment, do not sufficiently address imbalances in our trading relationship or have failed to align sufficiently with the United States on economic and national-security matters”.

Other details are still to come, including on the “rules of origin” that will determine what products might face even higher tariffs.

Trump also said “we have made a few deals today that are excellent deals for the country”, and a US official later told reporters that they were still to be announced.
 
I will update you guys. I’m flying to China end of this month. I went there in 2007 and I was surprised.
Take loads of pictures of the good and the not so good. Maybe do a PDF China travel vlog.
 
Is there anyone who can tell how much they made from this tariff until now?
 
There was a time when America was our mai baap and now you want china to be our mai baap?...... We want to be friends with both, china and America.....we will keep our strategic independence. That's the official policy of the state of the state of Pakistan...... your full stops are neither here or there.

America was the Baap that did not deliver, and we can give countless times from the 65 war, Pressler, Salala incident, and so forth. China has never done the same to Pakistan. To compare the two is simply ridiculous.
Pakistan's state policy flops all the time, it's only relations with China which have stood the test of time.
However it is good to have relations with all, especially the US.
 
America was the Baap that did not deliver, and we can give countless times from the 65 war, Pressler, Salala incident, and so forth. China never has never done the same to Pakistan. To compare the two is simply ridiculous.
Pakistan's state policy flops all the time, it's only relations with China which have stood the test of time.
However it is good to have relations with all, especially the US.

Yeah, I would say China relationship on par with our Nuke programme. It is untouchable.
 
The ‘fruits’ of the deal have started to appear…
For the first time in history, Pakistan will buy crude oil from the United States!
One million barrels will be loaded next month and will arrive in Pakistan by October.

Wow! Ignoring neighboring countries and buying oil from thousands of kilometers away?
Just imagine what kind of ‘wise leadership’ this country has fallen into the hands of.”
 

India discord​

Goods from India appeared to be headed for a 25pc tariff after talks bogged down over access to India’s agriculture sector, drawing a higher-rate threat from Trump that also included an unspecified penalty for India’s purchases of Russian oil.

Although negotiations with India were continuing, New Delhi vowed to protect the country’s labour-intensive farm sector, and the threat of higher rates from Trump triggered outrage from the opposition party and a slump in the rupee.

Without a deal, the rate will go into effect from Friday and single out India for harsher trade conditions than its major peers, potentially damaging the economy of a strategic US partner in Asia seen as a counterbalance to Chinese influence.
 
Believe me, I too have worried about Pakistan going so deep into the China camp that Pakistan may not be able to come to some 'just peace' with India in future even if that future is nowhere on the horizon right now.
China has been good for Pakistan and vice versa and may that remain like that. But China is not a true 'neighbor' of Pakistan: A tiny sliver of shared border through a very hostile climate. India shares a long border with Pakistan and a long history as well as considerably many things more than Pak China share. And we should never lose sight of those aspect of the three countries despite all the good and bad we see now.

Pakistan has more people to people contact with the Chinese than Indians. Only Afghanistan can claim more people to people relations than Sino-Pak relations. You seem to underestimate government and state level indoctrination that states apply in fermenting these relations.

Even the British colonial legacy is now being reimagined through the Chinese lens in Pakistan. Musharraf saw the writing on the wall as early as 2002.
 
Pakistan has emerged with the second-lowest tariff rate of any South Asian country. Afghanistan got hit with a 15pc levy, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka and Vietnam with 20pc, and India with 25pc.

CNN noted: “There is also satisfaction locally that Pakistan’s tariff rate is much lower than neighbour and arch-rival India’s. Fears in Islamabad that India was trying to isolate Pakistan financially have been somewhat tempered by the 25pc tariff rate that the Trump administration hit New Delhi with.”

Meanwhile, the Pakistan Stock Exchange (PSX) maintained its bullish momentum and crossed the 141,000-point barrier, despite dipping by as many as 433 points in the morning.

The benchmark KSE-100 index rose by 1,644.56 points (1.18pc) to reach a intraday high of 141,160.93 points at 4:11pm, from the previous close of 139,390.42 points. It finally closed at 141,034.98 points.

Having witnessed heavy selling pressure on Tuesday due to corporate earnings and political noise, the PSX had bounced back above the 139,000-mark yesterday, driven by the trade agreement with the US.



This screengrab shows PSX activity on August 1. — PSX data portal


Adviser to the Finance Minister Khurram Schehzad highlighted on X: “Pakistan is possibly the only country which the US has offered its investments as well, besides a competitive trade deal.”

He noted the “deal signals a strategic deepening of economic ties and shared growth”.

Speaking to Geo News, Schehzad expanded upon possible US investment in Pakistan’s energy sector, which he termed the “biggest area” in the economy.

“We need global partnerships in energy. We import 80-90pc of all our energy needs,” the finance minister’s adviser observed.

“If such an economy — a giant which has expertise in oil and gas — if they’re coming and talking about massively building oil and gas reserves, so we can export to the entire region, not just fulfil our own needs, this is a big development,” the adviser emphasised.

“If Pakistan make a deal with the US to set up big plants for exploration or machinery, we’ll get benefits in tariffs through that as well,” he added.

“The way Pakistan has been treated compared to different countries in this region, very encouraging and important,” Schehzad said, referring to the higher 25pc levy imposed on India.

While noting that the government’s role was to negotiate and secure a good deal, he called on the private sector to execute it through business-to-business, export contracts, and export engagement.

“The import bill can be reduced, the dollar can be impacted, overall employment generation, and GDP can be improved,” Schehzad highlighted.

He pointed out that the Pakistani companies, such as Oil and Gas Development Company Limited (OGDCL) and the Pakistan Petroleum Limited (PPL), were stakeholders in Balochistan’s Reko Diq mining project.


“There is also satisfaction locally that Pakistan’s tariff rate is much lower than neighbour and arch-rival India’s. Fears in Islamabad that India was trying to isolate Pakistan financially have been somewhat-

1). India SW exports alone to US - 150 billion (this excludes pharma, manufacturing etc.)
2) Pak total exports to US- 5 Billion (per your article) - so Pak exports to US is 20% of India's SW exports. Your savings of 6% is 1.2% of India's software exports. Less than 1% if you add Pharma, manufacturing etc.

With a massive 1% gain in export value you defeated India as per your leaders-

“The way Pakistan has been treated compared to different countries in this region, very encouraging and important,” Schehzad said, referring to the higher 25pc levy imposed on India.

Must make sense to you guess
 
America was the Baap that did not deliver, and we can give countless times from the 65 war, Pressler, Salala incident, and so forth. China never has never done the same to Pakistan. To compare the two is simply ridiculous.
Pakistan's state policy flops all the time, it's only relations with China which have stood the test of time.
However it is good to have relations with all, especially the US.
When it comes to the China, pakistanis are always bias..
 

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