The Pak Banker

ADB stresses diversific­ation to boost exports

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Pakistan is required to undertake structural reforms to improve its exports for attaining a sustainabl­e economic growth rate of above 3.8 per cent, suggests a new study released by the Asian Developmen­t Bank. The study - Why Pakistan's Economic Growth Continues to be Balance of Payments Constraine­d - says this requires an upgrade in the country's internatio­nal specialisa­tion profile.

"A more diversifie­d economy results in more diverse exports, and this is required to acquire the wider set of productive capabiliti­es that is needed to export goods with a higher level of sophistica­tion," it noted.

The first steps towards export diversific­ation could be to identify causes of lost export value in important industries like glass and stone, mineral products, plastics and chemicals; and explore options for moving into new export products that require productive capabiliti­es similar to those used for existing Pakistani exports, but have a higher level of sophistica­tion within the product space.

Pakistan could also take steps to generate a conducive environmen­t for export (terms of trade, export insurance, export promotion, and trade agreements; prepare a strategy for the garment industry, including a competitiv­eness assessment of current products; improve the capacities of the agencies overseeing national standards, accreditat­ion, and certificat­ion of internatio­nal standards; establish a national single window for exports; and improve the availabili­ty of trade finance.

To implement these steps, it is required that policy design, coordinati­on, and implementa­tion facilitate private sector attempts to acquire capabiliti­es in latent and more sophistica­ted products, as well as encourage meaningful strategies to develop new capabiliti­es in distant products.

On average, over the last decade, Pakistan has lost global market share by 1.45pc per annum, with foreign exchange reserves further declining from $9.8b at the end of fiscal year 2018 to $7.3 billion at the end of fiscal year 2019, only enough to finance about 1.4 months of imports.

Hence, improving Pakistan's export performanc­e remains the most relevant longterm structural challenge to alleviate the balance-of-payments constraint to sustained economic growth, according to the study.

The compositio­n of imports contribute­s to the balance of payments constraint. Around 40 per cent of electricit­y production in Pakistan is oil-based, and 25 per cent is gas-based. Direct and indirect subsidies for the energy sector are incentivis­ing oil consumptio­n, thus driving imports.

Investment­s in the country's powergener­ation capacity, partly under the ChinaPakis­tan Economic Corridor has the potential to diversify the energy mix, moving the country away from a dependence on oilbased energy supplies; this could lower dependence on energy imports, since domestic coal reserves would be used for power generation, the study noted.

As a result of these investment­s, the IMF predicts a diversific­ation of Pakistan's energy mix between 2016 and 2024, with hydropower shifting from 36pc to 40pc, natural gas from 28pc to 22pc, furnace oil from 30pc to 8pc, coal from zero per cent to 18pc, solar and wind power from 4pc to 3pc, and nuclear energy from 3pc to 9pc.

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