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Compliance with Global Quality Requirements in Pakistan’s Export Sector
Salman Ehsan and Ayesha Khanum
Published:Sept 2014
This paper describes the level of compliance with quality standards in relation to Pakistan’s top export product categories. With greater competition, innovations in technology, and stricter measures of quality being enforced, Pakistan needs to adopt a holistic, systematic approach to not just meeting, but also exceeding, international quality standards and certifications for its exports. Focusing on rice and textiles, we identify which compliance-related gaps need to be filled to ensure the sustainable growth of high-quality exports to major global markets. The study outlines the key dimensions of international quality standards as well as specific standards and requirements for textiles and rice, examines the quality assurance infrastructure in Pakistan, and presents policy recommendations.
KEYWORDS:
Global quality standards,
exports,
compliance,
Pakistan.
JEL: P45, L15, Q18, Q27.
Foreign Direct Investment and Technological Capabilities: The Relevance of the East Asian Experience for Pakistan
Khalil Hamdani
Published:Sept 2014
This paper makes the case for a vigorous policy thrust to support
investment-led growth. Pakistan’s economy has not maintained a sufficient level
of capital formation to sustain growth over the long term. Two thirds of current
growth is driven by consumption and not investment: this needs to be turned
around. The government needs to put in place an investment regime that
motivates and induces industry to invest, innovate, and reinvest. Foreign direct
investment can play an important role in strengthening the country’s
investment rates. There is also need for deliberate polices to boost technological
capabilities in the enterprise sector. In this context, East Asia – which
successfully created a dynamic process of capital formation and technological
learning that upgraded its productive capacity and underpinned export success –
holds important lessons for Pakistan.
KEYWORDS:
Investment,
technology,
industry,
Pakistan.
JEL: F21, O38, O53.
The Textiles and Garments Sector: Moving Up the Value Chain
Naved Hamid, Ijaz Nabi, and Rafia Zafar
Published:Sept 2014
The textiles and garments (T&G) sector accounts for almost 50% of Pakistan’s exports and is the largest component of manufacturing. T&G sector, because of recent favorable developments for the industry in Pakistan and the expected future changes in the international trade structure for the sector, has the potential to play an important role in expanding Pakistan’s exports. In addition, garments manufacturing is the least energy and capital intensive industrial activity and thus resonates with Pakistan’s resource endowment to generate economic growth and employment.
Garment manufacturers have tried to overcome the constraints arising from the energy shortages and adverse security and country risk perceptions by investing in power generation, upgrading IT, developing design and R&D capability. Punjab Government’s focus on garments as a central plank of its industrial strategy has also helped. However, this paper argues that for the sector to fully realize its potential, government policies that shape the incentive structure faced by the industry need to be re-aligned In this regard, the most important is Pakistan’s import policies and customs procedures that discourage the import of materials such as synthetic yarn and fabric, technical textiles and specialized trimmings and accessories needed by exporters to move up the value chain, and a significant bump up in the growth trajectory will only take place if import policy and custom procedures are substantially reformed. This paper focuses on the following themes: First, structural changes and trends in T&G exports; second, the associated constraints to growth of the garments sector; and third, to highlight some of the steps taken by the industry leaders in terms of policy reforms and by firms, particularly with regards to managing resources to enhance competitiveness.
KEYWORDS:
Pakistan,
exports,
textiles,
garments,
international trade,
growth,
global value chain.
JEL: F13, O10, O14, F10, L50, L10, L25, L60, L67.
Patterns of Export Diversification: Evidence from Pakistan
Hamna Ahmed and Naved Hamid
Published:Sept 2014
This paper examines historical trends in the diversification of exports in Pakistan, using the Hirschman index to quantify the degree of export diversification. We analyze the structure of exports through the lens of ‘traditionality,’ for which we construct industry-specific, average cumulative export experience functions, i.e., a traditionality index of all 2-digit export industries in Pakistan from 1972 to 2012. This is useful in distinguishing between traditional and nontraditional export industries. We also study the degree of structural change in the export sector since 1972 by recalculating the traditionality index based on five-year interval periods. The cross-industry variance of this index is then used to calculate the structural change index. Periods for which the index values are low are interpreted as periods during which the export industries experienced uniform patterns of export growth (and thereby no structural change). Periods for which the index values are high are interpreted as periods during which the export industries experienced varied patterns of growth, thus undergoing structural change. Finally, we explore the determinants of structural change in exports by looking at variables such as GDP growth, export growth, the real exchange rate, the growth rate of world trade, trade liberalization, and the degree of product concentration in the country’s export base.
KEYWORDS:
Pakistan,
export,
growth,
trade.
JEL: F40.
Should Pakistan Liberalize Trade With India Against the Backdrop of the FTA with China? A Comparative Advantage Analysis for the Manufacturing Sector
Naheed Memon, Faiza Rehman, and Fazal Rabbi
Published:Sept 2014
Pakistan and India have not yet normalized trade relations and gained the full benefits of bilateral trade despite significant developments to this end since 2011. Pakistan has yet to reciprocate the most-favored-nation status granted by India. This study investigates the benefits of trade liberalization between the two countries by studying the global competitiveness of Pakistan’s industrial sector from a policy perspective. We construct a revealed comparative advantage index for manufacturing products (HS 2-digit level) for Pakistan, India, and China for the period 2003–12, and then identify the changing patterns of comparative advantage for Pakistan. We find that 18 industries should be protected upon liberalizing trade with India. These industries are termed ‘vulnerable’ as they have moved from either borderline competitiveness to becoming uncompetitive or vice versa. Additionally, the excessive concessions granted to China in its free trade agreement with Pakistan and the resistance to opening up trade with India may have resulted in inefficient trade, i.e., imports from a less competitive partner and exports to a less lucrative market. We aim to establish a direction for further research to determine the ex ante impact of trade with India on the economy via a change in the production levels of these vulnerable industries, given the impact of free trade with China and the availability of Chinese substitutes.
KEYWORDS:
Pakistan-India trade,
revealed comparative advantage,
manufacturing exports,
trade liberalization.
JEL: F10, F11, F12.
Published:Sept 2014
Growing economic cooperation between the Pakistani and Turkish
governments—manifested in the recently proposed preferential trade agreement
(PTA)—has served to strengthen the historically good relations between both
countries. This paper explores the trade relationship between Pakistan and Turkey
in an attempt to analyze the potential gains for Pakistan under the proposed PTA.
We evaluate potential trade opportunities using descriptive statistics and three
trade indices: a trade complementarity index, export similarity index, and intraindustry
index. Our findings suggest that Pakistan’s trade surplus with Turkey,
strong export similarities, and intra-industry trade would allow greater
opportunities for firm synergies between the two countries. This, in turn, would
help Pakistan achieve greater value addition and a broader market base for its
exports. The Government of Pakistan should, therefore, lobby strongly for the
proposed PTA (which might later evolve into a free trade agreement) and leverage
the agreement in such a way that Pakistan can maximize its potential benefits.
KEYWORDS:
Preferential trade agreement,
Pakistan,
Turkey,
trade complementarity index,
export similarity index,
intraindustry trade index.
JEL: F14, F15, F13.
Reviewing Pakistan’s Import Demand Function: A Time-Series Analysis, 1970–2010
Zunia Saif Tirmazee and Resham Naveed
Published:Sept 2014
This paper investigates the conventional import demand function for
Pakistan using time-series data sourced from the World Development Indicators for
the period 1970 to 2010. Using a vector error correction model and impulse response
functions, we show that, for the given period, relative prices and income lose their
significance as long-run determinants of import demand. This indicates the need for
additional determinants. We compare the residuals of the conventional import
demand function with those of a model that includes the terms of trade and foreign
exchange availability (in addition to the conventional parameters) as determinants of
import demand, and find that the latter largely resolves much of what is
nondeterministic in the former model. The paper also explores the peculiar trend of a
falling imports-to-GDP ratio (from the 1980s to the 2000s), which is unusual for a
developing country. In a subsidiary regression analysis for this period, we argue that
falling net capital inflows explain this persistent fall in the imports-to-GDP ratio.
The recovery thereafter, when Pakistan started catching up with other developing
economies, may have been responsible for the 2008 balance-of-payments crisis.
KEYWORDS:
Pakistan,
import demand function estimation,
capital inflows,
balance of payments.
JEL: F140.
Pakistan’s Dependency on Imports and Regional Integration
Nasir Iqbal, Ejaz Ghani, and Musleh ud Din
Published:Sept 2014
With growing global and regional economic integration, Pakistan, too, is
actively seeking to enhance regional economic cooperation; it has entered into
various regional and bilateral trade agreements that encompass trade policies
ranging from import substitution to export promotion. However, the country’s
imports remain concentrated in a few product categories as well as in terms of
origin. Despite several regional trade agreements, Pakistan has not been able to
source its imports from regional trading partners. This stems from constraints
relating to trade facilitation, regulatory frameworks, and physical infrastructure.
Our empirical analysis shows that, while changes in real income and import
prices have a significant effect on import demand in the long run, variations in
the domestic price level do not. If Pakistan is to grow at 7–8 percent per annum
as envisaged in official development plans, it will continue to experience strong
growth in imports to meet its rising industrial and consumer needs. Pakistan
needs to develop a strategy to use regional integration schemes as a platform for
enhancing trade ties in both imports and exports. This will ensure greater trade
and investment links with its regional trading partners, helping to lower the
transaction costs of trade and boosting economic growth.
KEYWORDS:
Pakistan,
import demand,
regional integration.
JEL: F13, E64.
The Changing Landscape of RTAs and PTAs: Analysis and Implications
Rashid S. Kaukab
Published:Sept 2014
This paper traces the evolution of “discriminatory” international trading arrangements: (i) regional trade agreements (RTAs), which offer their members better access to each other’s markets; and (ii) preferential trade agreements (PTAs), which offer developing and least developed countries (LDCs) nonreciprocal access to certain markets. The number, coverage, and depth of RTAs have increased tremendously in the last 25 years, potentially leading to even deeper integration among dynamic economies. However, countries on the margin of RTA activity may be in danger of not benefitting from the growth in international trade. The number of countries offering PTAs has also increased with many developing countries now providing LDCs with nonreciprocal market access. This significant level of RTA and PTA activity raises serious challenges for countries such as Pakistan, which remain on the margins. Efforts to rectify this should, in the short term, focus on negotiating RTAs with selected countries to build the required capacity for such negotiations and improve Pakistan’s visibility on the RTA landscape. The country must aggressively seek and defend nonreciprocal market access under PTAs, with particular focus on such GSP schemes as offer additional benefits. Medium-term actions should aim to improve competitiveness by investing in infrastructure, energy, and human resources; adopting a coherent and supportive macroeconomic policy framework; and improving law and order. This will help Pakistan enter into and benefit from RTAs with dynamic economies while substantially reducing its dependence on PTAs.
KEYWORDS:
Pakistan,
WTO,
regional trade agreements,
preferential trade agreements,
GSP.
JEL: F13, F40.
The WTO Trade Facilitation Agreement: Implications for Pakistan’s Domestic Trade Policy Formulation
Mohammad Saeed
Published:Sept 2014
Recognizing that trade facilitation has contributed significantly to reducing costs and time in cross-border trade, World Trade Organization (WTO) members adopted the new Trade Facilitation Agreement (TFA) at the last ministerial conference in Bali. WTO members are now gearing up to implement the commitments ensuing from the TFA in accordance with the special and differential treatment stipulated for developing countries. This paper assesses the impact of the TFA on Pakistan’s national trade policy and shows how the process of policy formulation in Pakistan should be adjusted so that the agreement can be promptly and correctly implemented on a sustainable basis.
KEYWORDS:
Pakistan,
world trade organization,
trade facilitation agreement (TFA).
JEL: F13, F40.
Published:Sept 2014
Regional trade has been an important factor in the economic success of many countries. Within most trading blocs, intra-regional trade comprises 40 percent or more of each member country’s individual trade. However, for the regional arrangements of which Pakistan is a member, intra-regional trade accounts for less than 5 percent. Pakistan’s strategic location is its greatest asset, but it has not leveraged this to its advantage. Although it was a relatively forward-looking country until the mid-1960s its policies have not been favorable to promoting trade and economic development since then. While other successful developing countries have espoused liberal trade regimes since the 1980s—resorting to protectionism only on a selective basis—Pakistan continues to rely on import substitution policies. Clearly, the country needs to revisit its regional and global trade policies.
KEYWORDS:
regional trade,
Central Asia,
regional trade routes,
ports,
Gwadar.
JEL: F10, L50.
Determinants of School Choice: Evidence from Rural Punjab, Pakistan
Hamna Ahmed and Sahar Amjad Sheikh
Published:Jan - June 2014
The objective of this study is to understand why parents in rural areas of Punjab, Pakistan, choose to send their children to private schools when free public schools are available. The study utilizes the Privatization in Education Research Initiative (PERI) school choice dataset compiled by the Lahore School of Economics in collaboration with the Punjab Bureau of Statistics. These data provide rich information on parents’ perception of their child’s school relative to alternative schools he or she could have attended. The findings suggest that parents’ perceptions play an important role in school choice. In particular, their perceptions of school quality and employment opportunities emerge as key determinants of private school choice. Additionally, expenditure on and access to private schooling relative to public schooling as well as the socioeconomic status of the household have a significant impact on parents’ probability of choosing a private school for their child.
KEYWORDS:
School choice,
public vs private,
rural Punjab,
Pakistan.
JEL: A19, H13, R20.
The Impact of Exchange Rate Volatility on Trade: A Panel Study on Pakistan’s Trading Partners
Abdul Jalil Khan, Parvez Azim, and Shabib Haider Syed
Published:Jan - June 2014
This study investigates the impact of domestic and foreign currency-valued exchange rate volatility on the export and import demand functions with reference to Pakistan’s trading partners. We use GARCH-based exchange rate volatilities and the least-squares dummy variable technique with fixed-effects estimation to measure the volatility impact on both demand functions. The study evaluates a series of exchange rates from 1970:01 to 2009:12 to compare the long-run impact of volatility with that of the short run. The results show that, when Pakistan employed the US dollar as the vehicle currency with its trading partners, volatility discouraged both imports and exports. In contrast, both the import and export demand functions remained unaffected by volatility distortions when Pakistan traded with its developing partners using bilateral exchange rates valued in domestic currency terms. In policy terms, this implies that Pakistan should opt for direct domestic currency when trading with middle- and low-income countries.
KEYWORDS:
GARCH models,
foreign exchange markets,
volatility,
panel data,
fixed-effects model,
international financial markets,
foreign exchange policy,
trade,
Pakistan.
JEL: C53, F1, F31, C23, G15, F44, O24.
Published:Jan - June 2014
This study focuses on the impact of trade liberalization on firm entry and exit in Punjab’s export manufacturing sector over the decade 2001–10. As far as the province’s export industries are concerned, real exchange rate depreciation attracts new firms but also leads weaker firms to exit. A reduction in local or international tariffs, however, has no significant impact on firm entry or exit.
KEYWORDS:
trade liberalization,
exchange rates,
firm entry,
Pakistan.
JEL: F41.
Can Analysts Really Forecast? Evidence from the Karachi Stock Exchange
Haris Bin Jamil, Aisha Ghazi Aurakzai, and Muhammad Subayyal
Published:Jan - June 2014
This study examines the impact of analysts’ recommendations on stock prices listed on the Karachi Stock Exchange for the period 2006–12. The recommendations are extracted from the daily Morning Shout report published by Khadim Ali Shah Bukhari Securities Ltd (KASB), which provides buy and sell recommendations for different stocks. We use the market model to estimate the abnormal returns around the recommendation dates for these securities. The study also investigates whether the abnormal returns are due to price pressure or information content. We find that investors earn abnormal returns on the basis of analysts’ recommendations for these securities. The results are robust in considering only the sub-sample subsequent to 2008’s global financial crisis, and are also consistent with the information content hypothesis and price pressure hypothesis.
KEYWORDS:
Analysts’ recommendations,
information content,
price pressure,
abnormal returns,
market efficiency,
Pakistan.
JEL: G14, G24.
Terms-of-Trade Volatility and Inflation in Pakistan
Kiran Ijaz, Muhammad Zakaria, and Bashir A. Fida
Published:Jan - June 2014
This empirical study examines the effects of terms-of-trade (TOT) volatility on inflation in Pakistan, using annual data for the period 1972 to 2012. The results show that TOT volatility has a significant negative effect on inflation in Pakistan. This result is robust to alternative equation specifications and TOT volatility measures. Output growth has a negative effect on inflation while foreign export prices have a positive effect on inflation. Both the depreciation of the nominal exchange rate and money supply increase the inflation rate. The fiscal deficit and world oil prices are also found to increase domestic inflation.
KEYWORDS:
Terms of trade,
inflation,
Pakistan.
JEL: E31, F41.
The Efficiency of Foreign Exchange Markets in Pakistan: An Empirical Analysis
Rizwana Bashir, Rabia Shakir, Badar Ashfaq, and Atif Hassan
Published:Jan - June 2014
This study investigates the empirical relationship between spot and forward exchange rate efficiency with reference to Pakistan and the efficiency of its foreign exchange market. We use monthly data from the State Bank of Pakistan and KIBOR rates for the period July 2006 to December 2013. Our results indicate that the forward exchange rate does not fully reflect all the information available. Market players may gain the benefits of volatility speculation due to market inefficiency. Pakistan’s foreign exchange market is still small compared to those of other emerging economies, implying that substantial policy work is required.
KEYWORDS:
Foreign exchange markets,
forward exchange rate efficiency,
efficient market hypothesis,
emerging economy,
real effective exchange rate,
Pakistan.
JEL: F31, G10, F30.
An Analysis of the Relationship between Inflation and Gold Prices: Evidence from Pakistan
Saira Tufail and Sadia Batool
Published:July - Dec 2013
In this study, we formulate a new inflation equation to capture the potential effects of gold and stock prices on inflation in Pakistan. We aim to assess the inflation-hedging properties of gold compared to other assets such as real estate, stock exchange securities, and foreign currency holdings. Applying time-series econometric techniques (cointegration and vector error correction models) to data for 1960–2010, we find that gold is a potential determinant of inflation in Pakistan. On the other hand, it also provides a complete hedge against unexpected inflation. Real estate assets are more than a complete hedge against expected inflation, although stock exchange securities outperform gold and real estate as a hedge against unexpected inflation. Foreign currency proves to be an insignificant hedge against inflation. Given the dual nature of the relationship between gold and inflation, it is increasingly important for the government to monitor and regulate the gold market in Pakistan. Moreover, stock market investment should be encouraged by the government given that asset price inflation does not pose a critical problem for Pakistan as yet.
KEYWORDS:
Gold prices,
inflation hedging,
assets,
time series econometrics technique,
Pakistan.
JEL: E31, E37, E4.
Choice of Anchor Currencies and Dynamic Preferences for Exchange Rate Pegging in Asia
Syed Kumail Abbas Rizvi, Bushra Naqvi and Nawazish Mirza
Published:July - Dec 2013
This paper attempts to answer two important questions in the context of Asian exchange rate regimes with respect to the choice of anchor currencies and dynamic preferences for exchange rate pegging. According to our results, the US dollar is the first choice of a de facto peg for many countries such as China, Hong Kong, the Philippines, and Pakistan. Other countries, apart from Korea and Indonesia, seem to prefer a basket peg comprising two or more anchor currencies with rapidly increasing weight attached to the euro. This shift from the US dollar to the euro reflects changes in the choices, preferences, and policies of these economies as a result of varying macroeconomic and global financial realities.
KEYWORDS:
Exchange rate regime,
flexibility,
pegging,
Asia.
JEL: F31, E58, F41, E42, F33.
Economic Returns to Education in France: OLS and Instrumental Variable Estimations
Sajjad Haider Bhatti, Jean Bourdon, and Muhammad Aslam
Published:July - Dec 2013
This article estimates the economic returns to schooling as well as analyzing other explanatory factors for the French labor market. It addresses the issue of endogeneity bias and proposes two new instruments for use in the instrumental variable two-stage least squares technique. Our results show that the proposed instruments are relevant and adequate, based on evidence from the available literature. After using the proposed instruments, we find that the OLS coefficients for schooling are biased downwards. Finally, we choose between the two proposed instruments.
KEYWORDS:
Endogeneity bias,
instrumental variable,
Mincerian model,
two-stage least squares,
wage regression,
France.
JEL: C1, I2, J3, P5.