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End of globalization: Beginning of ‘made in Pakistan’
The author believes the world will no longer be a global village in the post-pandemic era and Pakistan will have to be self-sufficient. He asks if we can make JF-17 jet why not a commercial aircraft also, why not make our own locomotives, and much more. Government needs to set up a task force and set the ball rolling for 'Made in Pakistan.'

Humayun Gauhar
Made-in-Pakistan-696x365.jpg


There is no way exaggerating it. Over my long life of 71 years, I have seen the world change. But I have never seen it change so utterly and completely in just a month. Up is no longer up, and down is no longer down. For example, proffering your hand for a shake is now considered rude when it was the other way round before Covid-19.

Games, plays and musical performances are not being performed, and the few that are, are to no audiences. The only theatre is the theatre of the absurd, and it is being performed beautifully everyday by the US President, Donald ‘Jenius’ Trump during his pandemic briefings. The other actors come on and contradict him, underlining the fact that at heart, he is a fool.

So badly has he handled the crisis that even he thinks he is in danger of losing the Presidential election come November, else why would he blame China for trying to make him lose the election? Only a man who fears such a thing starts pointing fingers so much before the event. Even his predecessor has said that his handling of the pandemic was a chaotic disaster.

In my last article, I called it the new normal. Actually, what we have is the new abnormal, which means that the new world order, which is being fashioned naturally by events out of our control will have a mind of its own. It might be better than what we have had, because there will be no human fine tuning it.

On the other hand, it could be completely absurd, leading to the end of globalization as we know it, the European Union might degrade, or come to an end as a project, and the world will no longer be a ‘global village.’ It will be every country for itself or in small pockets of alliances. To survive this economic and political catastrophe, it will require all hands on deck as it were.

We Pakistanis should come together and reclaim our long lost pride. We should insist as far as possible that everything that we buy or use is made in Pakistan. If you put your mind to it, we can, after all, do a lot of things, but are too lazy and stupid not to.

How about a campaign that says ‘Basmati is only Pakistani’? Right now in Maharashtra, people are throwing out Pakistani goods from shops, basically emphasizing their prejudice

Didn’t Balochistan University make a ventilator? Could you ever have imagined that, when Americans found it so difficult to do so? If we can make the F-17 Thunder Jet Fighter, why can’t we make a commercial aircraft? When we travel domestically, we take our domestic airlines for granted and jump on one of them and traipse off. Now there are no airlines flying, nationally or internationally.

I know people who have driven all the way from Karachi to Islamabad and were none the worse for wear. This is the time for the government to seriously launch a world-class train service, which will get you to you destination without pain. If I’m not wrong, during the British Raj, India had a fantastic train service which was run mostly by Anglo-Indians. It inspired the famous movie with Ava Gardener called “Bawani Junction.”

If we had not messed up our steel mill, we could have made excellent rolling stock, carriages, and missiles that can fly to Europe, so why can’t we make our own locomotives? The government should launch ‘A Made in Pakistan’ campaign, and awaken our long asleep pride and patriotism, and finish the prejudice against Pakistani goods.

They should give a two-year deadline to Pakistani industrialists to make a genuinely indigenous car. It can be done. Way back in the early 70s, the consultancy I worked for copied the Citroen 2CV6 and the French passed it. Sadly, the then minister concerned, Mr. J.A Rahim vetoed it, saying that what we needed was not an ‘awami’ or peoples car, but Awami buses and trucks.

Admirable no doubt, but it killed the peoples car and the Awami buses and trucks just remained an idea. We couldn’t make seats, so our seats were like hammocks, and the roof of the car was canvas. It made it light, cheap, and affordable. Anyway, that’s just an old story. If one sets ones mind to it, anything can be done.

Didn’t we make the bomb, in the face of much opposition and missiles to deliver them? We can do many other things. We just have to put our minds to it. And, by the way, we should stop India from stealing our products, like basmati rice, which they sell as Indian.

How about a campaign that says ‘Basmati is only Pakistani’? Right now in Maharashtra, people are throwing out Pakistani goods from shops, basically emphasizing their prejudice. We should not worry about such things and wait for the Indians to come to their senses.

By the way, didn’t I say in one of my last articles that the US dollar is in danger of being replaced as a global reserve and trading currency? Well it has started. China has started a major trial of state run digital currency and used the e-RMB for trading in its bourses. It cancelled the dollar peg in its stock exchange transactions and decided to deal officially by using the Chinese Yuan instead of the dollar, making the dollar non-existent in Chinese trade.

We have had crypto currencies before, like the bit coin, but never one which is run by a major economy. An alternative digital currency which is sovereign will blunt the impact of any sanctions that the US imposes, like on Iran. That’s not all: China now intends to pay its government servants in the digital currency from May. So the dragon is awake and moving. And the US and its stooges better watch out.

In this new situation, it would be a good idea for the Pakistan government to form a task force to work out how to deal with this new situation, how to take advantage of it and how to live in a dollar free world. Meaning, a world which is not pressurized by the dollar. The dollar will not entirely disappear, but just recede into a high degree of irrelevance, like sterling has done, which at one time was the major currency. Then ‘Made in Pakistan’ will get wheels and will one day God willing, start flying.

https://www.globalvillagespace.com/end-of-globalization-beginning-of-made-in-pakistan/
 
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They should give a two-year deadline to Pakistani industrialists to make a genuinely indigenous car. It can be done. Way back in the early 70s, the consultancy I worked for copied the Citroen 2CV6 and the French passed it. Sadly, the then minister concerned, Mr. J.A Rahim vetoed it, saying that what we needed was not an ‘awami’ or peoples car, but Awami buses and trucks.

Admirable no doubt, but it killed the peoples car and the Awami buses and trucks just remained an idea. We couldn’t make seats, so our seats were like hammocks, and the roof of the car was canvas. It made it light, cheap, and affordable. Anyway, that’s just an old story. If one sets ones mind to it, anything can be done.

Didn’t we make the bomb, in the face of much opposition and missiles to deliver them? We can do many other things. We just have to put our minds to it. And, by the way, we should stop India from stealing our products, like basmati rice, which they sell as Indian.

How about a campaign that says ‘Basmati is only Pakistani’? Right now in Maharashtra, people are throwing out Pakistani goods from shops, basically emphasizing their prejudice. We should not worry about such things and wait for the Indians to come to their senses.

By the way, didn’t I say in one of my last articles that the US dollar is in danger of being replaced as a global reserve and trading currency? Well it has started. China has started a major trial of state run digital currency and used the e-RMB for trading in its bourses. It cancelled the dollar peg in its stock exchange transactions and decided to deal officially by using the Chinese Yuan instead of the dollar, making the dollar non-existent in Chinese trade.

We have had crypto currencies before, like the bit coin, but never one which is run by a major economy. An alternative digital currency which is sovereign will blunt the impact of any sanctions that the US imposes, like on Iran. That’s not all: China now intends to pay its government servants in the digital currency from May. So the dragon is awake and moving. And the US and its stooges better watch out.

In this new situation, it would be a good idea for the Pakistan government to form a task force to work out how to deal with this new situation, how to take advantage of it and how to live in a dollar free world. Meaning, a world which is not pressurized by the dollar. The dollar will not entirely disappear, but just recede into a high degree of irrelevance, like sterling has done, which at one time was the major currency. Then ‘Made in Pakistan’ will get wheels and will one day God willing, start flying.

https://www.globalvillagespace.com/end-of-globalization-beginning-of-made-in-pakistan/

A poor country like Pakistan should be investing in manufacturing of public vehicles of transport like buses, vans, trucks, trams and trains rather than wasting the investment in developing the individual luxuries like cars.
 
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We need to take step by step. Make list of things we import that put burden on our balance of payment. Start from scratch then go up step by step. But we have one problem we are not efficient. We never give our 100% where a Chinese person finish his job in one day we take a week to do that, even with low quality . jf17 design might be ours but the tech and machine were given to us to assemble them. Same we do with cars and motorcycles. We need to focus on exporting finished products instead of RAW materials. India have been taking the benefit of that. we export to UAE and then Indian companies make them the finished products. Smallest example is SALT.
 
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End of globalization: Beginning of ‘made in Pakistan’
The author believes the world will no longer be a global village in the post-pandemic era and Pakistan will have to be self-sufficient. He asks if we can make JF-17 jet why not a commercial aircraft also, why not make our own locomotives, and much more. Government needs to set up a task force and set the ball rolling for 'Made in Pakistan.'

Humayun Gauhar
Made-in-Pakistan-696x365.jpg


There is no way exaggerating it. Over my long life of 71 years, I have seen the world change. But I have never seen it change so utterly and completely in just a month. Up is no longer up, and down is no longer down. For example, proffering your hand for a shake is now considered rude when it was the other way round before Covid-19.

Games, plays and musical performances are not being performed, and the few that are, are to no audiences. The only theatre is the theatre of the absurd, and it is being performed beautifully everyday by the US President, Donald ‘Jenius’ Trump during his pandemic briefings. The other actors come on and contradict him, underlining the fact that at heart, he is a fool.

So badly has he handled the crisis that even he thinks he is in danger of losing the Presidential election come November, else why would he blame China for trying to make him lose the election? Only a man who fears such a thing starts pointing fingers so much before the event. Even his predecessor has said that his handling of the pandemic was a chaotic disaster.

In my last article, I called it the new normal. Actually, what we have is the new abnormal, which means that the new world order, which is being fashioned naturally by events out of our control will have a mind of its own. It might be better than what we have had, because there will be no human fine tuning it.

On the other hand, it could be completely absurd, leading to the end of globalization as we know it, the European Union might degrade, or come to an end as a project, and the world will no longer be a ‘global village.’ It will be every country for itself or in small pockets of alliances. To survive this economic and political catastrophe, it will require all hands on deck as it were.

We Pakistanis should come together and reclaim our long lost pride. We should insist as far as possible that everything that we buy or use is made in Pakistan. If you put your mind to it, we can, after all, do a lot of things, but are too lazy and stupid not to.

How about a campaign that says ‘Basmati is only Pakistani’? Right now in Maharashtra, people are throwing out Pakistani goods from shops, basically emphasizing their prejudice

Didn’t Balochistan University make a ventilator? Could you ever have imagined that, when Americans found it so difficult to do so? If we can make the F-17 Thunder Jet Fighter, why can’t we make a commercial aircraft? When we travel domestically, we take our domestic airlines for granted and jump on one of them and traipse off. Now there are no airlines flying, nationally or internationally.

I know people who have driven all the way from Karachi to Islamabad and were none the worse for wear. This is the time for the government to seriously launch a world-class train service, which will get you to you destination without pain. If I’m not wrong, during the British Raj, India had a fantastic train service which was run mostly by Anglo-Indians. It inspired the famous movie with Ava Gardener called “Bawani Junction.”

If we had not messed up our steel mill, we could have made excellent rolling stock, carriages, and missiles that can fly to Europe, so why can’t we make our own locomotives? The government should launch ‘A Made in Pakistan’ campaign, and awaken our long asleep pride and patriotism, and finish the prejudice against Pakistani goods.

They should give a two-year deadline to Pakistani industrialists to make a genuinely indigenous car. It can be done. Way back in the early 70s, the consultancy I worked for copied the Citroen 2CV6 and the French passed it. Sadly, the then minister concerned, Mr. J.A Rahim vetoed it, saying that what we needed was not an ‘awami’ or peoples car, but Awami buses and trucks.

Admirable no doubt, but it killed the peoples car and the Awami buses and trucks just remained an idea. We couldn’t make seats, so our seats were like hammocks, and the roof of the car was canvas. It made it light, cheap, and affordable. Anyway, that’s just an old story. If one sets ones mind to it, anything can be done.

Didn’t we make the bomb, in the face of much opposition and missiles to deliver them? We can do many other things. We just have to put our minds to it. And, by the way, we should stop India from stealing our products, like basmati rice, which they sell as Indian.

How about a campaign that says ‘Basmati is only Pakistani’? Right now in Maharashtra, people are throwing out Pakistani goods from shops, basically emphasizing their prejudice. We should not worry about such things and wait for the Indians to come to their senses.

By the way, didn’t I say in one of my last articles that the US dollar is in danger of being replaced as a global reserve and trading currency? Well it has started. China has started a major trial of state run digital currency and used the e-RMB for trading in its bourses. It cancelled the dollar peg in its stock exchange transactions and decided to deal officially by using the Chinese Yuan instead of the dollar, making the dollar non-existent in Chinese trade.

We have had crypto currencies before, like the bit coin, but never one which is run by a major economy. An alternative digital currency which is sovereign will blunt the impact of any sanctions that the US imposes, like on Iran. That’s not all: China now intends to pay its government servants in the digital currency from May. So the dragon is awake and moving. And the US and its stooges better watch out.

In this new situation, it would be a good idea for the Pakistan government to form a task force to work out how to deal with this new situation, how to take advantage of it and how to live in a dollar free world. Meaning, a world which is not pressurized by the dollar. The dollar will not entirely disappear, but just recede into a high degree of irrelevance, like sterling has done, which at one time was the major currency. Then ‘Made in Pakistan’ will get wheels and will one day God willing, start flying.

https://www.globalvillagespace.com/end-of-globalization-beginning-of-made-in-pakistan/
End of globalization is an exaggeration and its the same attitude which caused us many harms in the past and continues to so even now. If govt is serious about developing the local industry than all it has to do is align its procurement and rest will be taken care of by the market forces and also curb on the corruption.
 
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It couldn't happen due to bureaucratic and red tape culture in addition to the person sitting on concerned ministrial post will always have conflict of interests, and will not do anything beneficial for public interests until and unless it benefits him.
 
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Superb thread. something materialistic from this forum, be self sufficient in food and daily usage items first, then move on with big engg, Globalisation is going to end, Here in India a start has been made,This pandemic is a blessing in disguise, Nations are begining to think of going indigenous. Everything (Covid'19) happened for good and happening for good in future too.
 
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Govt to pursue ‘Make in Pakistan’ policy to boost exports, says Razak Dawood
The adviser to prime minister says tarrifs need to be rationalised to achieve policy objectives
Abdul-Razak-Dawood-696x398.jpg

ISLAMABAD: The Adviser to the Prime Minister on Commerce and Investment Abdul Razak Dawood on Friday said that the government will diligently pursue the ‘Make in Pakistan’ policy and work towards rapid industrialization aimed at enhancing exports and substituting imports.

This adviser to the prime minister was addressing a meeting with a delegation of chambers of commerce and industry at the Ministry of Commerce (MoC), said a press release issued by the MoC. The meeting was attended by representatives of Islamabad, Rawalpindi, Lahore, Gujranwala, Faisalabad, Gujrat, Multan and Mirpur chambers of commerce.

While addressing the delegation Razak Dawood said that tariffs need to be rationalised in order to achieve the objectives of ‘Make in Pakistan’ policy.

He added that in order to combat the Covid-19 pandemic some sectors have not been considered for tariff rationalisation while some important sectors have been given benefits.

He further reiterated that the anomalies arising out of the budget have been addressed to a large extent while the remaining anomalies will be resolved in consultation with the stakeholders.

The adviser to the prime minister further said that the government is following a three year plan according to which it will gradually remove duties and tariffs, particularly on raw materials, for the benefit of the industry.

He added that the government will have a special focus towards the engineering sector in order to boost exports of power equipment sector, auto sector, home appliances, mobile phones, sanitary ceramics ware, utensils, cutlery, pumps and motors.

Razak Dawood assured that the government has taken important policy decisions in this regard and exports of the engineering sector will improve in FY21.

Discussing different opportunities for production of value-added products and their export, the adviser to the prime minister underlined the importance of investing in certifications and laboratories, particularly for exploiting potential in the food processing sector.

The adviser also informed that the MoC is working to resolve issues of the exporters on priority with a particular focus on export of Personal Protective Equipment (PPE).

He reassured that exports of hand sanitisers, disposable gowns and gloves, face shields, biohazard bags, goggles and shoe covers, made from various classes of materials, including woven and non-woven chlorinated polyethylene, polypropylene, spunbond and melt blown is allowed. However, export of N-95 masks, surgical masks and tyvek suits is still on hold.

Earlier on June 26, Abdul Razak Dawood had said that Pakistan will be rapidly diversifying its exports into high quality and globally competitive engineering and pharmaceutical products while reducing its dependence on five traditional export sectors.

The adviser to the prime minister also announced that Dawlance is set to export microwave ovens from Pakistan for the first time in the country’s history.

https://profit.pakistantoday.com.pk...an-policy-to-boost-exports-says-razak-dawood/
 
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First annex parts of East Punjab and Rajastan to make place for everything. Poor Karachi is about to explode from carrying Pakistan for so long, and Lahore's obsession with expanding eastwards will be halted in its tracks soon enough.
 
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First annex parts of East Punjab and Rajastan to make place for everything. Poor Karachi is about to explode from carrying Pakistan for so long, and Lahore's obsession with expanding eastwards will be halted in its tracks soon enough.

makes my blood boil. We have housing schemes literally 1hr drive away from indian border. Terrible city planning.
 
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makes my blood boil. We have housing schemes literally 1hr drive away from indian border. Terrible city planning.

At least it'll motivate the leaders who want to reap benefits of retirement from armed forces to cooperate with those leaders who genuinely care about defense.
 
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Its my dream to see made in Pakistan buses,trams and high speed rails. Imagine these three forms of transport in metropolitan cities of Pakistan. Reduction in traffic and pollution. What a sight that would be :smitten:

Even after 72 years, Pakistan has Not builT a well planned city.
I am favor of building new cities with modern master plan which should include following:
  • City Properly zoned for Residential, commercial and industrial zones
  • Well Balanced Neighbourhood Development.
  • Transportation/Reliable Transit System Provide Best, most cost-efficient public transportation system which will include Metro-buses, monorail or metroRail or circular railway (for inner city) and modern train system or bullet train system from city to city.
  • Green Space: Trees, plant and parks
  • Community Centres/Meeting Places /Malls
  • Bike & Pedestrian Infrastructures
  • Indoor and outdoor spots facilities.
  • Arts & Culture : museum and art galleries
  • Pedestrian Friendly Public Spaces (lots of footpath)
  • Stein drainage (Incase of heavy rain)
  • Gray/Black water processing plant
  • Water reservoirs
  • Water treatment plant
  • Education: Schools, vocational colleges, Colleges and Universities
  • Healthcare: Neighborhood clinics, Pharmacy and hospitals
 
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Why aren't no good hospitals in Pakistan?
Why ur country men flock to India for medical attention, btw India has some worldclass hospitals, Why health care is not given much importance?
 
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