Media Coverage

Pak-India trade good for both countries, says Dastagir
The News
Thursday, 12th Dec 2013
Islamabad/Rawalpindi

Minister of State for Commerce, Textile & Privatisation Khurram Dastgir Khan has stressed that trade between India and Pakistan is a win-win situation for both countries, a fact supported by studies including those done by Consumer Unity and Trust Society and SDPI.

He was the chief guest on Wednesday at the second day of three-day 16th Sustainable Development Conference titled ‘Creating momentum: today is tomorrow’ organised by the Sustainable Development Policy Institute (SDPI).

Dastgir observed that what we need is a non-discriminatory access to both countries’ economies adding that we need to cooperate on the energy production as well because both countries have exhaustible sources of energy.

He said that the governments realise the importance of regional connectivity so Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif had spoken and taken the courageous step towards a healthy bilateral relationship with India and now we expect India to do the same.

Earlier, in his opening address on Tuesday, Minister for Planning, Development and Reforms Ahsan Iqbal said that the global paradigm changed to digital literacy which has no access to poor, hence creating a new division of knowledge haves and have-nots.

He observed that the challenge of our times is that economic thought generated by the industrial revolution was now becoming redundant and new forces of economic landscape including knowledge revolution are changing. He said that wealth in the last two decades was not coming from manufacturing empires and land estate but from knowledge houses and knowledge became number one generator of wealth. He said that rise in global economy, greater global architecture and regionalisation are becoming stronger realities hence countries finding it difficult to compete with companies from large home markets.

He said that we need learning and a strong political will to move forward. He said that it is an achievement that India is not an issue anymore in Pakistani elections which also indicated our political maturity. People now more focus on economic agenda, he said. He said that India and Pak are only countries where mobile service gets cut off instead of putting on roaming. He said that regional cooperation requires political confidence and trust.

Dr Abid Suleri, executive director of the SDPI, in his opening remarks, said that inaction on part of member states of Saarc has accelerated development challenges for each of them individually as well as collectively and there was need for urgent action to jointly consider and implement interventions in favour of the suffering masses of South Asia.

Hafiz Pasha, former minister of finance, said that corruptive tax exemptions and concessions should be withdrawn for a much needed increase in the Tax-GDP ratio. He said that a number of economic challenges are due to non-economic factors like terrorism, rising load-shedding, insurgency in Balochistan and rise in sectarian violence. He called for cutting back non-essential imports because of Pakistan’s poor balance of payments position.