Our agricultural productivity is a fifth of what it could be.
We have the potential to increase arable land by 55% with more dams, Our water use is 7 times as inefficient as California. We could implement coal gasification (with the water properly used) and save on a large portion importing fuel, as well as build up our own petrochemical and pharmaceutical industries from the domestic coal based fuel. (Fuel prices are about to rebound soon enough, and we need to get prepared before we are blind sighted again). Mining could grow with the Reko-Diq dispute resolved, as we attract more investors. We could move up the value added chain and start our own fashion brands that can be sold around the world. There are a whole lot of sectors that can grow, so it’s really up to us how quickly we get our industries modernized and how much we can export.
I hope the government lays out a road map to reach an annual export of over a $100 billion by the end of the decade. We need to aim high and make the required reforms to reach it. We need a road map the allows our economy to grow as fast as it possibly can, and not be capped at under 7% for fear of a new circular debt/IMF situation.
We need a plan that attracts at least 3 if not 5% of GDP FDI year on year for the next 20-30 years so we can maximize the utilization of our Demographic dividend.
If we can sustain at least an average of 7% a year over the next 25 years; we can reach a
$2 Trillion dollar economy as projected by the world Bank. Which, depending on the size of the population, could mean a
standard of living between that of the Dominican Republic or Serbia and Malaysia or Turkey of a few years ago. Sustained growth of 7% a year is not an unrealistic target, but will require a generation of real dedication.
Lender says four influential groups have frustrated efforts to bring reforms in country
www.google.com