DarkStar
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- Sep 22, 2008
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I see everybody is harping about FDI... What has FDI actually contributed towards Pakistan's economy over lets say the last decade? Absolutely nothing.
Most of the investment has been in teh Telecomsm, Real Estate sector and consumer finance.
I agree, we have healthy competition in the mobile phone market, but all that is happening there is profits are going out, there is no real value added to the economy. A handful of jobs are created, but nothing more than that. It is not the sort of labour intensive industry that Pakistan needs investment in.
As for the investment in Real Estate, it has pushed prices up, making sure that there are some winners who sold their land and property at the right time, but for the vast majority of the country's non property owning workers, buying a house or appartment in a town or city is now beyond them.
consumer finance? it has given a superficial aura of prosperity.
Yes, lahore is chock a block with new fancy cars, almost every car being new, or a couple of years old. But this consumer finance is not going to help the real economy. If this money was used to finance big industrial projects, or labour intensive factories which create jobs, then it would have been a good thing.
People are encouraged to spend more than what they earn, by doling out credit cards with astronomical interest rates. The cases of suicide from people who have not kept up their payments are recorded almost daily in local newspapers.
There is a campaign to change Pakistan from a savers nation into a spending nation...Only, that we should spend the cash that we dont have, so that we are indebted for the forseeable future. Guess where all the profit from this financing will go?
The kind of FDI that comes to India and China, is just not coming to Pakistan. We need industries which will add value to the economy, in terms of technology and innovation, bringing much needed blue collar jobs.
Who the hell needs makro and other supermarkets opening in Pakistan? All that mega super markets will do is take away business from pakistan's millions of traders, shops, supermarkets, stalls, wholesalers, suppliers, etc. Pakistan is also a nation of small shopkeepers and traders.
These big makro/wal mart type of warehouse shopping complexes will eventually squeeze the life out of the local traders, effecting millions upon millions of people who depend on trade for their livelihood. It has happened in Europe and the USA, where small traders and to some extent medium sized companies have almost virtually gone bust. The only hope to survive is if you have carved out a niche for youserlf.
What takes this to a new level of preposterousness is that most of these foreign firms raise a significant chunk of their cash from Pakistani banks. If these banks are so willing to splash their cash, how about investing in some local businesses to improve our own industries?
The fact of the matter is, the investment coming in is designed to take the cream off the top of the milk, so to speak.
We should only allow FDI that is industry specific and adresses a need or shorftall in a particular sector.
Otherwise we should politely decline.
Thanks, but no thanks.
Most of the investment has been in teh Telecomsm, Real Estate sector and consumer finance.
I agree, we have healthy competition in the mobile phone market, but all that is happening there is profits are going out, there is no real value added to the economy. A handful of jobs are created, but nothing more than that. It is not the sort of labour intensive industry that Pakistan needs investment in.
As for the investment in Real Estate, it has pushed prices up, making sure that there are some winners who sold their land and property at the right time, but for the vast majority of the country's non property owning workers, buying a house or appartment in a town or city is now beyond them.
consumer finance? it has given a superficial aura of prosperity.
Yes, lahore is chock a block with new fancy cars, almost every car being new, or a couple of years old. But this consumer finance is not going to help the real economy. If this money was used to finance big industrial projects, or labour intensive factories which create jobs, then it would have been a good thing.
People are encouraged to spend more than what they earn, by doling out credit cards with astronomical interest rates. The cases of suicide from people who have not kept up their payments are recorded almost daily in local newspapers.
There is a campaign to change Pakistan from a savers nation into a spending nation...Only, that we should spend the cash that we dont have, so that we are indebted for the forseeable future. Guess where all the profit from this financing will go?
The kind of FDI that comes to India and China, is just not coming to Pakistan. We need industries which will add value to the economy, in terms of technology and innovation, bringing much needed blue collar jobs.
Who the hell needs makro and other supermarkets opening in Pakistan? All that mega super markets will do is take away business from pakistan's millions of traders, shops, supermarkets, stalls, wholesalers, suppliers, etc. Pakistan is also a nation of small shopkeepers and traders.
These big makro/wal mart type of warehouse shopping complexes will eventually squeeze the life out of the local traders, effecting millions upon millions of people who depend on trade for their livelihood. It has happened in Europe and the USA, where small traders and to some extent medium sized companies have almost virtually gone bust. The only hope to survive is if you have carved out a niche for youserlf.
What takes this to a new level of preposterousness is that most of these foreign firms raise a significant chunk of their cash from Pakistani banks. If these banks are so willing to splash their cash, how about investing in some local businesses to improve our own industries?
The fact of the matter is, the investment coming in is designed to take the cream off the top of the milk, so to speak.
We should only allow FDI that is industry specific and adresses a need or shorftall in a particular sector.
Otherwise we should politely decline.
Thanks, but no thanks.
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