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SDZ: A smarter path to industrial growth in Pakistan

Pakistan Observer · Jun 21, 2026, 1:35 AM · Also reported by 1 other source

Why this matters: local context for readers following news across Pakistan and the region.

Pakistan’s economic challenge is not a lack of resources but a persistent failure to convert them into value. The country remains heavily reliant on exporting raw materials while importing finished goods, locking it into a structurally weak position in global trade. The result is predictable. Persistent deficits, fragile industry and limited job creation. The solution lies in a decisive shift from a consumption led model to a production oriented economy anchored in manufacturing and value addition. Infrastructure investment is necessary but not sufficient. Roads, power and logistics only become economically meaningful when they are embedded within productive industrial ecosystems. Experience elsewhere suggests what works. China’s industrial transformation was not driven by infrastructure alone but by sustained policy direction, export orientation, clustered industrial development and systematic investment in skills. The defining feature was consistency over decades, not policy improvisation. Pakistan’s missing link is not ambition but execution. Small and medium enterprises, which typically form the backbone of industrial economies, remain constrained by limited access to finance, weak technological upgrading and fragmented markets. Without addressing these constraints, large scale industrial policy will continue to underperform. Strong ecosystems are built from the ground up, not imposed from the top. The macroeconomic consequences are already visible. Pakistan consumes more than it produces, creating chronic external pressure and currency instability. Exports remain concentrated in low value commodities. Sustainable adjustment requires a structural move toward processing and manufacturing rather than extraction and raw output. The real constraint is not resources but the failure to move up the value chain. This is where Special Development Zones (SDZ) offer a more pragmatic approach than conventional Special Economic Zones. Instead of building new industrial encla

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