The Pak Banker

Pakistan seeks more trade with central Asia in diversity push

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Pakistan is looking to intensify trade with neighbor Afghanista­n and countries in Central Asia, as it looks to diversify commerce beyond the top players, the nation's trade adviser said.

The South Asian nation is looking to finalize a new trade accord with Kabul by June, Abdul Razak Dawood, the commerce adviser to Prime Minister Imran Khan, said in an interview in Islamabad. It plans to grow trade with five landlocked Central Asian nations Uzbekistan, Tajikistan, Turkmenist­an, Kyrgyzstan and Kazakhstan -- to about $1.5 billion a year from less than a billion in the past decade, he said.

"We're too restricted to a few countries -- North America, European Union and China," said Dawood. "But there is a much bigger world." The U.S. withdrawal from Afghanista­n promises a return of stability and provides an opportunit­y to Pakistan to strengthen commerce with its neighbor, which sits at the cross-roads of South and Central Asia. Also, Islamabad stands to benefit from greater trade with Central Asian markets that are rich in energy resources needed to feed its ambition to grow its industrial base.

Pakistan is due to sign transit and preferenti­al trade agreement with Uzbekistan in July, Dawood said.

The South Asian economy's move to scout for newer markets stems from the need to diversify its trade basket that's heavily reliant on the U.S., EU and China. Of its total $66 billion of annual trade in the year ended June 2020, China accounted for $11.2 billion and North America $6.76 billion, according to data from State Bank of Pakistan.

Analysts see the new push in the context of Pakistan's geo-strategic framework, which draws from the economic cooperatio­n espoused by Chinese President Xi Jinping's Belt and Road Initiative.

While China has channeled investment­s toward electricit­y generation in Pakistan as part of its Belt and Road Initiative.

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Federal Minister for Finance and Revenue, Shaukat Tarin, chairing a meeting of the National Price Monitoring Committee to review the price trend of essential items at the Finance Division.
-APP ISLAMABAD Federal Minister for Finance and Revenue, Shaukat Tarin, chairing a meeting of the National Price Monitoring Committee to review the price trend of essential items at the Finance Division.

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