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Flying high: Pakistan leads the way among regional competitors

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Flying high: Pakistan leads the way among regional competitors
By Farooq Baloch
Published: April 2, 2014

KARACHI:
Pakistan is leading other markets in the grouping of South Asia Growth Economies-West regions that includes countries like Bangladesh, Sri Lanka, Nepal and Bhutan, according to Akkasha Sultan who is Regional Director Applications for Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) countries.


Serving as the headquarters for the SAGE-W region, the country is ahead of its regional counterparts in terms of adopting technologies and transformation at a large scale, Sultan said in an interview with The Express Tribune at the company’s office in Karachi last week.

“Pakistani market is growing at a very fast pace. It is one of our major markets in terms of revenues,” Sultan said, however, refusing to disclose the financial information for competition reasons.

“While some other vendors closed their businesses, our investment in Pakistan is growing,” the director said.

Based in Singapore, Sultan is looking at Commercial Application Business as well as Cloud Strategy for all the ASEAN – a combination of 17 countries including Pakistan, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka, Nepal, Bhutan and more developed markets like Malaysia, Indonesia, Philippines, Singapore and Thailand. SAGE-W, he said, reports back to Singapore, the headquarters for the ASEAN region.

The database solutions giant has 1,100 customers using different technologies, applications, and middleware. Its major clients include telecom, financial services, manufacturing and related industries – within manufacturing, textile is their biggest sector.

“We are focusing a lot on small and medium-size enterprises (SMEs) including textile, fast moving consumer goods, retail, insurance and tier two financial services,” Sultan said, adding the company was looking at major projects in utility reforms, tax reforms, e-governance projects, financial modernisations in financial services, and cloud application strategy for all of these sectors.

“In future, I won’t be surprised to see Pakistan as one of the fastest growing markets for adopting cloud technology,” Sultan said. “It makes sense for them [Pakistan] to go to cloud especially when they have scarcity of resources,” he said.

“Cloud is going to be one of the biggest enablers for emerging markets like Pakistan,” Sultan said. With the adoption of cloud technology, he said customers could bring in best practices adopted by Fortune 500 companies, which means companies in Faisalabad would be using the same applications as those in the US and the UK.

Many companies in Pakistan already have cloud as part of their strategy but the adoption rate is slow, according to Sultan. He further said the country would soon adopt cloud technology.

“Pakistan’s biggest challenge is connectivity across the country, however, we see an opportunity if 3G is coming in, and we see that with 3G the data on mobile devices will be very high and that’s where it enables these applications to be used in the right way,” Sultan said. The future is very promising for Pakistan, he said, and 3G would transform business in a much faster way.

Oracle is also working with a network of 56 partners and academic institutes to create skilled workforce that can help the implementation of their solutions.

The company is exposing students to simulating environments where they are working on live projects through Oracle’s partners in Pakistan. “This is helping us create a pool of talented individuals in the market,” Sultan said.

Oracle Academy is one classic example, which works with educational institutes and universities in Pakistan to provide academic material and initiatives to all these students on applications and database technologies on Java, Sultan says. These education institutes, he says, are helping the company create a pool of talented and skilled individuals who are working on different initiatives of the company.

Giving an example, Sultan said, Higher Education Commission of Pakistan is one of the first examples, where the government decided to automate campuses of few public universities in Pakistan. “This is the largest deployment of Oracle’s Peoplesoft Campus Solutions in Asia Pacific,” he said. Bangladesh’s University Grants Commission (UGC) has followed the footstep of HEC Pakistan, according to Sultan, and more similar organisations in the region are eying on Islamabad to replicate this strategy.

Moreover, this pool of trained workforce is helping the company deploy its solutions in international markets – an added advantage of the country’s resources.

Published in The Express Tribune, April 2nd, 2014.

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India is not in the SAGE-W group??
 
‮پاکستان‬ - ‭BBC Urdu‬ - ‮’پاکستانی معاشی شرح نمو، نیپال اور افغانستان سے کم‘‬

how do you see the above news? Even behind Nepal and Afghanistan.. !!! such a shame for PMLN and its policies.. all the economic we are seeing is the biggest of bubbles ever created in history..
Afghanistan s economy grew by 47% YoY a few years ago. Small economies tend to grow at faster pace because of base effect. Ever wonder why the potential GDP growth for US is that of only 5% YoY? Its basic growth accounting some intuition. The comparison is only conducted among the major economies.
 
Afghanistan s economy grew by 47% YoY a few years ago. Small economies tend to grow at faster pace because of base effect. Ever wonder why the potential GDP growth for US is that of only 5% YoY? Its basic growth accounting some intuition. The comparison is only conducted among the major economies.

I don't disagree with you. but Pakistan is not a developed economy like EU and USA.. for a decade of so China's growth rate has been above or around 10%.. so what does this mean? is Pakistan such a developed country that economy growth of 3.4 for consecutive two years is OK? hell NO!... If Pakistan lags behind Afghanistan and Nepal.. there is something serious missing.
 
I don't disagree with you. but Pakistan is not a developed economy like EU and USA.. for a decade of so China's growth rate has been above or around 10%.. so what does this mean? is Pakistan such a developed country that economy growth of 3.4 for consecutive two years is OK? hell NO!... If Pakistan lags behind Afghanistan and Nepal.. there is something serious missing.
Indeed Pakistan is not a developed country, but its certainly doesn't rank alongside Afghanistan in economic size as well. China kept on growing at 10% because of enormous slack in southern side, keeping economy underemployed for a decade. But now its growth has started to decelerate as well to around 7%.
 
Indeed Pakistan is not a developed country, but its certainly doesn't rank alongside Afghanistan in economic size as well. China kept on growing at 10% because of enormous slack in southern side, keeping economy underemployed for a decade. But now its growth has started to decelerate as well to around 7%.

what do you want to say? be clear .. Pakistan growth of 3.4% is OK or it is a shame for Pakistan to remain even behind its all the neighbors!
 
what do you want to say? be clear .. Pakistan growth of 3.4% is OK or it is a shame for Pakistan to remain even behind its all the neighbors!
Pakistan's growth of 3.4% comes with chronic energy crisis, worse law and order situation, a near unsustainable budget deficit and a dismal ~6% Tax/GDP. The stock market operates under different dynamics since corporate entities have inherent drive for fiscal discipline (due to inability to avert default by printing currency-like sovereign can-) and revenue maximization. And of course the expectations about future growth (rather than historical ones) drive the stock prices.
 
‮پاکستان‬ - ‭BBC Urdu‬ - ‮’پاکستانی معاشی شرح نمو، نیپال اور افغانستان سے کم‘‬

how do you see the above news? Even behind Nepal and Afghanistan.. !!! such a shame for PMLN and its policies.. all the economic we are seeing is the biggest of bubbles ever created in history..

actually you have no shame or no knowledge of pakistani politics and current affairs all you do is read a heading and make a conclusion. PMLN formed the govt about 10 months ago and Sharah-e-namu is going up...read up dude.
 
Pakistan GDP growth was above 5.1 % of GDP last quarter of the financial years.
 
Pakistan's growth of 3.4% comes with chronic energy crisis, worse law and order situation, a near unsustainable budget deficit and a dismal ~6% Tax/GDP. The stock market operates under different dynamics since corporate entities have inherent drive for fiscal discipline (due to inability to avert default by printing currency-like sovereign can-) and revenue maximization. And of course the expectations about future growth (rather than historical ones) drive the stock prices.

lame excuses as always! so whose responsibility is to provide electricity and business environment? It is a shame that Pakistan with more 180 million with 50% of its youth is lagging behind all its neighboring countries.. now whatever the reason may be the world doesn't give a flying f!!!

actually you have no shame or no knowledge of pakistani politics and current affairs all you do is read a heading and make a conclusion. PMLN formed the govt about 10 months ago and Sharah-e-namu is going up...read up dude.

Actually you are an oxymoron... who doesn't have manners of polemics. enough said!
 
lame excuses as always! so whose responsibility is to provide electricity and business environment? It is a shame that Pakistan with more 180 million with 50% of its youth is lagging behind all its neighboring countries.. now whatever the reason may be the world doesn't give a flying f!!!
Okey now just open up the generation capacity time series and see how much generation capacity was added to the system is last 14 years, you would never be asking this question in the first place. Just a hint for you
Total Capacity in 1990===> 7,949 MV
Total Capacity by the start of 2000====>17,399 MV
capacity added by PPP and PMLN regimes in 10 Years ~10000 MV

Total Capacity by the end of 2010======> 19,786 MV
Total capacity added under Musharraf Regime in 10 Years~ 1500MV
Now probably if you had seen the stat, you would have known that who reaped the rewards sown by whom and who suffered the failures of whom ( and I am not including the population growth rates which would make things much more worse for second stat)

Now we come to our so called demographic dividand
Total Population 162,488,343 (2009 stats)
Male population in age group 10-39===> 42,766,068
Female population in age group 10-39===> 39,557,906
% of Male demographic dividend to total population====> 26%
% of Female demographic dividend to total population====> 24%
With dismal female labor participation rate ( around 20% in 2011), coupled with 60% male participation rate, you can calculate what is left of our "demographic dividend". Not until very recently the punjab government has increased the female representation to 33%. Nothing has been done to significantly to address the core of the problem.
And still if you need to through anymore useless rants, at least google the term to get some update about it. Getting to such data takes some serious efforts which most of people like you don't really bother to do.


Actually you are an oxymoron... who doesn't have manners of polemics. enough said!
Well nevermind such things, actually when nothing is left for commons to discuss, they resort to rants.
 
the world doesn't give a flying f!!!



Actually you are an oxymoron... who doesn't have manners of polemics. enough said!

Be careful my friend. You are hovering on the verge of earning a negative rating. What do you wish to demonstrate by using such language and then commenting upon other people's manners? Do you know what is an oxymoron? Or do you wish to call him a moron, but can only manage it by adding an oxy in front?

How old are you?
 
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