If you ask me what you need to solve these problem is to:
1) Improve work ethics.
2) offer on-job training to the employees. (continuous professional development)
And more internships availability for FSc/BSc students. Technically, focus on math has no part in it. As every creative thing will improve your problem solving/analysis powers.
@peagle
I know one company (my brother in law works there). They just conduct workshops with some lecture and making Lego structures, to complete a task. This simple exercise increases the productivity, critical thinking and performance of the workforce.
The company charge 20k £ per session. So its no joke. I will find the website and post the link.
Edit:
https://www.enhanceltd.com/playnpd/
This sounds like the German model of education, they seem to follow an academic and vocational route, that's interchangeable I believe and seems to have delivered for them very well. Although the Koreans and the Japanese have a purely academic model with little scope for vocational training and they have done rather well.
Perhaps it is about finding the right mix for your cultural understanding. Hard labour isn't something to be ashamed of in Europe, it's honest hard work of skilled labour. But in Asian societies, which have not followed the gradual developmental path of the Europeans, have jumped straight into the modern world, they still view hard labour differently, and less desirable, perhaps the vocational aspect has less space in which it can operate.
It might be different in Pakistan, so might work, although we have a similar mindset as Japanese in terms of social standards, so hard to say.
Maths is also something that has to be done right from an early age, and
@Bilal Khan (Quwa) had some interesting ideas regarding that.
I think if the government can set aside a budget, in partnership with the private sector,
1. We could open a few boarding schools for the gifted, fees would depend on capacity.
2. We establish 3 institutions near each other, so they feed off each other's capabilities.
3. A university that acts as a centre for reverse engineering, so the tax structure and industrial space within the city would work in an ecosystem, where we become fully capable of absorbing existing technologies. (Faisalabad)
4. A university that specialises in modern and future sciences. (Sargodha)
5. A university for pure research, particularly theoretical sciences. (Jahurabad)
The three locations are fairly close to each other, they would work separately, and in a single ecosystem, where suitable facilities would be provided within a policy framework, helping the universities and business to work with and feed off each other. Such a step will also work as a target focal point for students around the country, very soon the quality of students would improve, purely from the sheer numbers who would be trying their hardest to get in, and in reverse, these universities would go around the country, talent hunting.