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Made in Pakistan Vehicles

no offence, but suzuki always has been garbage.....whether it was an FX or an Alto

if quality is going even more down, then yes massive change is required. Govt. should intervene if necessary
 
Locally assembled car sales

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And these bikes are built to last, this is what they routinely have to go through:
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This should be strictly banned. if you dont have the means to give your children a comfortable future, please dont reproduce. Kanglay ho gaye hain lakin bachay paida karnay nahi choray. This ridiculous couple may reproduce few more times for all we know.
 
Actually, all of these vehicles are assembled in Pakistan.
60% of the car comes from Japan (engine, chassis, ecu etc). The rest (seats, plastics, wiring, lights etc) are made in Pakistan
 
Question; why do u Indians ask stupid questions?
Is it out of jealousy as for u we r bunch of cavemen.

How can that be a stupid question?Jealous?For what? We have much better options here & there are Indian automobile companies like Tata , Mahindra etc - visit Made in India thread & enlighten yourself
 
I personally find Indians are far more linguistic, regionalist and casteist, rather less nationalistic then many other people.

  • Maybe Indians feel the same way about the Chineses however, I'm frustrated that Indians have in the recent decade or two cornered the market on Pakistan's future markets. And they are damned hard to take on.
For eg., if India can sort out the mess, they have :


  • ore, coal, ports, railways, new-found off shore natural gas and massive local and neighbourhood demand like Thailand and Indonesia right next to each other. India can spit out the cheapest steel if they can get the mix right.
Therefore, I am convinced Pakistan should leave the auto industry alone and focus on cotton, oil & gas, minerals etc. rather then babysit Pak's raw material import based steel industry. Steel is basic input the auto industry. Earlier I hoped Pak's auto industry could develop as suppliers to giant plants and OEM's in Iran, Turkey, Malaysi, Indonesia and India but it's unviable.

Also Chinese slowdown is making steel cheap; it's dropped to less then 1/2 of what it costs for Pak steel to import all the raw materials and smelt it locally. Pak steel is bleeding the economy so sorry while India is throwing up steel tycoons like no tomorrow. There's simply no comparison, competition or even sustainability.

No offence, but just one steel based Indian conglomerate the Tata group is worth nearly 1/2 of entire Pak economy re: group Co. TCS's $ 80 Billion valuation.
 
They are going to start assembling Toyota Prius in Pakistan by the end of 2013. Its going to be called "Rough Road". Thank the stars they did not name it "Rough Rider".
 
[QUOTE="No offence, but just one steel based Indian conglomerate the Tata group is worth nearly 1/2 of entire Pak economy re: group Co. TCS's $ 80 Billion valuation.[/QUOTE]

That is not even 1/3 of Pakistan's GDP.
I hope Pakistan does not just become a cheap labour centre like Bangladesh.
 
[QUOTE="No offence, but just one steel based Indian conglomerate the Tata group is worth nearly 1/2 of entire Pak economy re: group Co. TCS's $ 80 Billion valuation. That is not even 1/3 of Pakistan's GDP. I hope Pakistan does not just become a cheap labour centre like Bangladesh.

Brother - when you have hundreds of millions of poor people living below the poverty line (the case is true in all SAARC countries like Bangladesh, India or even... Pakistan), then the only choice is to give them an option for a dignified livelihood (Rooti-Ruji). Low cost labor is the only way to lift countries like ours out of poverty. The other option is them turning into a world of crime, misery, desolation or even terrorism.

I realize I am a 'Mehmaan' here and don't want to point out these uncomfortable realities - but they are all true. We have to view these realities with sane, unemotional eyes.

Trying to develop high-tech industries (i.e. high-cost labor) does not work for Third-world countries. There is too much competition from First-world countries.

All recently-minted 'East Asian Tiger' nations came up the ladder of development through low-cost labor to make garments, shoes and or 5-cent plastic crap, whether small countries like Japan, Taiwan, Malaysia, Thailand or Korea or large countries like China. I have spent my life travelling in these places - and Bangladesh is taking the same route, albeit a slower one it seems. All these countries moved from low-cost to high-cost labor through the passage of time. There are no shortcuts.

Even Pakistani Textile conglomerates (white linen, bed-sheets, towels etc.) are moving their operations to Bangladesh. Businessmen don't see these situations with emotional lenses or filters or look down on the low-cost laborers in Bangladesh. These people want work rather than starve or being involved in 'Chori' out of desperation. There is money to be made in Bangladesh and it is open for everyone.
 
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