Gulf News

Textile sector shows signs of distress

LACK OF ENERGY SUPPLY AND GOVERNMENT SUPPORT AND FALL IN DEMAND TAKE THEIR TOLL ON NATION’S ONCE-PROLIFIC BUSINESS

- KARACHI

neglected waiting area, empty reception and dim lights greet visitors at what used to be the biggest textile factory in the northern industrial area of Pakistan’s economic hub.

At its peak, Al Abid Silk Mills Ltd. employed 7,600 employees in Karachi. Now only a handful can be seen in the near-abandoned garment workshop. It’s one of hundreds that have shut down over the past few years, contributi­ng to Pakistan’s exports falling to their lowest in six years.

Exporters from South Asia’s second-largest economy, including textile manufactur­ers who account for more than half of all overseas shipments, say buyers have shifted to countries including Bangladesh and Vietnam as continual power outages impede their ability to meet order deadlines, while complainin­g that the government has provided scant support.

“The government has never planned how we need to go forward with the textile industry,” Naseem Sattar, the 80-year-old chief executive officer of Al Abid, said as he smoked in his office in the derelict plant. “Such a factory is considered a national asset and we got no help.”

Despite a pick-up in economic growth after the government submitted to an Internatio­nal Monetary Fund (IMF) programme in 2013 to avert a balance of payment crisis, Pakistan’s exports have fallen as global demand slows and the nation tries to overcome an energy shortage. Overseas shipments for the year through June fell to $21 billion (Dh77 billion), the lowest level since 2010, according to Pakistan Bureau of Statistics.

Balance trouble

“Internally you have constraint­s on energy and then manufactur­ing keeping exports down,” said Turab Hussain, head of the economics department at the Lahore University of Management Sciences. “If oil prices go up and exports don’t pick up there will be pressure on your balance of payments and currency.”

About 100 member factories have shut down and at least 500,000 people have lost jobs in the past two years, according to Saleem Saleh, acting secretary general of All Pakistan Textile Mills Associatio­n, the biggest contributo­r to the nation’s textile exports. About two-thirds of the members of the Pakistan Bedwear Exporters Associatio­n have stopped working in the past five years, according to its head, Shabir Ahmad.

Most factories shutting down are small or mid-sized plants unable to bear the extra cost of prolonged power outages. Meanwhile, larger factories have invested in their own power, including diesel generators, to cope with the nation’s electricit­y deficit of about 3,000 megawatts.

The IMF, which is set to conclude its three-year, $6.6 billion loan programme with Pakistan at the end of this month, is pointing to a number of causes, including the local currency it says is overvalued by as much as 20 per cent. “The continued decline in exports is a cause for concern, to a good extent that’s due to a fall in internatio­nal prices for cotton and other commoditie­s,” Harald Finger, the IMF’s mission chief for Pakistan, said in a July interview.

Domestical­ly, “there are security issues, there are continued power outages, even though they are declining now, that’s still a factor. There are issues around the business climate, and so on, and also one of these factors is also the real effective exchange rate.”

About half of Pakistan’s exports are shipped to six countries, while 40 per cent of total textile exports are primary commoditie­s, including cotton yarn sent to China, Minister of Commerce Khurram Dastgir Khan told lawmakers in Islamabad’s parliament on September 5. Pakistan’s apparel exports grew less than half the pace of Bangladesh and Vietnam before the recent fall during 2005 to 2012, according to World Bank data.

For buyers, Pakistan’s competitor­s are also more alluring due to the country’s tarnished security image after years of insurgency, bombings and violence.

The government recognises the industry’s malaise, and Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif on a visit to Karachi on September 8 said boosting exports Workers carry out quality control checks at D.L. Nash (Pvt) Ltd in Karachi. Textile factories in the country have shut down in the past two years. IMF plan for economic growth coming to an end. is a top priority and his administra­tion will soon announce relief measures.

Sharif is also pegging his 2018 re-election prospects on ending the daily power blackouts, relying on a surge of Chinese investment and projects worth $46 billion that were announced last year.

“Economic growth and exports are interlinke­d,” Sharif said. “We cannot afford to ignore our exports.”

Pakistan already announced in June a zero-rated sales tax regime for five export industries, including textiles. Borrowing has become more attractive with the discount rate at its lowest in more than four decades. Sharif this month asked the ministry of commerce to arrange a duty-free import of five million bales of cotton to plug a domestic shortage this year.

‘Cannot ignore’

Despite these measures, State Bank of Pakistan Governor Ashraf Mahmoud Wathra says the nation needs to diversify products and exports markets away from those on a declining trend. However, he expects improved electricit­y and gas supplies this year to stem some of the drop in exports.

“When I speak to industrial­ists, I see them more comfortabl­e than two-to-three years ago,” Wathra said.

Textile exporters complain about tax refunds being delayed by the authoritie­s, but otherwise “they are very happy with the interest rate and refinance rate,” he said.

Sattar, whose factory used to make $100 million annual revenue at its peak, doesn’t agree.

He wants to get his plant running again, but is unable to repay loans taken to purchase the milling machines. Sattar is now being hounded by banks and the country’s anti-graft agency, he said.

“If you are drowning, they push you further down,” he said.

“Textiles are from Pakistan.” going away

 ?? Bloomberg ??
Bloomberg
 ?? Bloomberg ?? A worker inspects a piece of fabric ahead of stitching at D.L. Nash (Pvt) Ltd, a textile manufactur­er in Karachi, on September 10.
Bloomberg A worker inspects a piece of fabric ahead of stitching at D.L. Nash (Pvt) Ltd, a textile manufactur­er in Karachi, on September 10.

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