Search Results for: Pakistani
10 results out of 145 results found for 'Pakistani'.
PAKISTAN STEEL SECTOR PUSHES FOR UNIFORM 20% IMPORT DUTY ON ALL STEEL PRODUCTS
BY RAHIMULLAH YUSUFZAI, IN PESHAWAR
The Pakistan Iron and Steel Merchants Association (PISMA) is continuing to press or a 20% uniform customs duty on Pakistani imports of steel products, despite its calls being ignored in the recent Pakistan budget.
The association says the duty is needed to help protect the domestic industry from international price fluctuations.…
PAKISTAN PHARMA SECTOR OPPOSES PLANNED LIBERALISATION OF INDIA MEDICINE TRADE
BY KEITH NUTHALL
THE CHAIRMAN of the Pakistan Pharmaceutical Manufacturers’ Association (PPMA) wants his government to pull back from allowing Indian medicine exporters to sell India-approved medicines in Pakistan from January 2013. Muhammad Asad told Pakistani journalists he feared his members would suffer from India being given ‘most favoured nation’ status under world trade law next year – a step agreed by Pakistan’s cabinet in December.…
PAKISTAN STEEL MILLS PRIVATISATION NOW UNLIKELY, BUT RUSSIAN INVESTMENT MAY FOLLOW
BY RAHIMULLAH YUSUFZAI, IN PESHAWAR
THE PAKISTAN government has shied away from selling off Pakistan Steel Mills (PSM) in its latest privatisation announcement, with court proceedings and opposition within the company deterring a sale. PSM was not among the 23 public sector banks, insurance firms, electricity supply companies, postal services, hotels, railways, and other concerns listed for inclusion by the government’s Privatisation Commission in a new round of sell-offs beginning in April.…
PAKISTAN PAINT SECTOR IS ROBUST, DESPITE POLITICAL INSTABILITY
BY RAHIMULLAH YUSUFZAI, IN PESHAWAR
WHILE Pakistan may suffer from political instability, its paint industry has been registering an average 6%-8% annual growth rate over the past decade due to the country’s expanding automotive and construction sectors. That these key customers are doing well is fortunate, given the fact that the country’s GDP growth in 2010-1 was 2.4% and has been forecast to grow at 3.5%-4.5% only in 2011-12.…
PAKISTAN CLOTHING SECTOR WELCOMES NEW ACCESS TO EUROPEAN MARKETS
BY RAHIMULLAH YUSUFZAI, IN PESHAWAR
PAKISTAN’S struggling clothing and textile industry, which generates 65% of the country’s total national foreign exchange earnings, is anticipating a significant boost to export sales following the recent World Trade Organisation (WTO) decision to approve waiver allowing 75 Pakistani products duty-free access to European Union (EU) markets for two years.…
AL-QAEDA WEAKENS, BUT ITS SPIN-OFF GROUPS AND THE TALIBAN STILL THRIVE
DESPITE the killing of Osama bin Laden in Pakistan last May, Al Qaeda and its affiliated groups remain a global money laundering and terrorist financing concern. Yet a decade on from the September 11 attacks, counterterrorism specialists say there has been too much focus on Al Qaeda itself (it means The Base in Arabic) but not enough on associated and other militant groups that pose significant threats.…
BANGLADESH CLOTHING EXPORTERS PUSH THEIR GOVERNMENT TO HOLD FIRM ON PAKISTANI GSP+
BY RAGHAVENDRA VERMA
BANGLADESH will not oppose the European Union’s (EU) plans to grant Pakistan GSP+ status, just-style has been told. However, the country’s powerful clothing exporters have called on their government to press for the EU to withhold these privileges for products that are important to Bangladesh’s manufacturing industry, including some clothing lines.…
GLOOMY OUTLOOK FOR FREE TRADERS IN KNITTING SECTOR - BUT EU ORIGIN LABEL PLANS DROPPED
BY KEITH NUTHALL and DAVE YIN
THIS has been the year where the European Union (EU) considered imposing a draconian origin labelling law that would have been a major headache for knitwear manufacturers and retailers. In the winter, the European Parliament was seriously discussing insisting on a regulation forcing knitwear and crocheted clothes and accessories imports into the EU to carry country of origin labels.…
PAKISTAN ACCOUNTANTS DEAL WITH MAJOR DAMAGE CAUSED BY SUMMER FLOODS
BY RAHIMULLAH YUSUFZAI
THE FLOODS that devastated Pakistan this past summer did not just destroy farmland and housing – they ruined many financial records and legal documents, making life that much harder for accountants in Pakistan. "We don’t know how to deal with the aftermath of the floods because there is still no mechanism on the part of the government or the private sector to cope with the challenges and difficulties that our accounting community is facing," said a senior chartered accountant RafaqatUllah Babar.…
PAKISTAN TOBACCO INDUSTRY RIDES OUT FLOODS
BY RAHIMULLAH YUSUFZAI
Pakistan tobacco industry rides out floods
Pakistan’s tobacco industry was hit hard by the huge monsoon floods this summer, but it could have been much worse if the floods had come earlier. Much of the tobacco crop had been picked in time.…