Hassan Guy
SENIOR MEMBER
- Joined
- Aug 23, 2016
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Do they sell milk in glass bottles or plastic bags in China?
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Dude the pak govt sucks, don't expect anything from themIm not blaming Chinese.. its the responsibility of Pak govt to look after the interests of the country.. which it is failing at!
For example, Chinese companies are for a fact screwing Pak by using loopholes in the system anywhere and everywhere possible..
Pak govt has given em facilities of tax free (zero duty) import of materials and machinery... apart from that chinese goods (cheap) are being dumped in market... all thanks to free trade agreements etc which are screwing Pak businesses.
Do you know, we even have Chinese individuals selling mobiles on roadside.. while a Pak citizen woukd get caught if he ever dared bring a few from abroad?
Pak China, trade imbalance is worrisome... we are importing a hundred times more than exporting!
While FTA & other agreements are effectively ruining local businesses which cant compete with chinese goods... due to various factors..
Same is the case in Pakistan..A lot of countries mandate that any project being done by a foreign company needs to have a domestic partner at X% of the labor force.
Pakistan itself is filled with an educated workforce that doesn't have the experience due to deficiencies of capital to fund projects. MBAs, Engineers, Comp Sci. Some degrees are from diploma mills but even the best from NUST/LUMS/Dow/UP face uncertainty as a basis leave towards the West.
The issue is how soon can Pakistanis take over vs fears of an indentured servitude.
Ive never been a CPEC thumper.Told you so.
Pakistani cows are halal you should import emIK sb,
Pak pigs/wild boars maybe haram, Chinese porcines may be halaal...
Regards
Ive never been a CPEC thumper.
Again im not against CPEC... but CPEC has both the potential to make or break us... depending on how GoP plays it.
Again... ur peddling indian narrative...Whether you believe it or not, my difficulties with CPEC are more to do with wishing Pakistan well than being envious and hoping that it will fail. Ever since it was created, Pakistan has held on to foreign apron-strings; whether in defence, with the Chinese currently replacing the Euro-American bloc, or in economics, with massive subvention from the oil-rich states whenever needed, or in the development of missile technology.
Once again, Pakistan has opted for the escalator instead of taking the stairs. I don't think it will work. All the monetisation of the work will flow back to China; key personnel will be Chinese; control will forever be in Chinese hands.
I am dreading another development.
If you leave aside Indian trolls and Pakistani super-patriots, and study the records and the history of the region, certain very uncomfortable facts will surface. Several of the Pamir Emirates were vassals of Kashgar; China already has a strong historical claim to the Gilgit region. Now, having invited them in, Pakistan will have to figure out how to get them out. All these articles about how strong the Chinese presence is getting in Pakistan as a whole, and all those unpublished, unprinted, untold stories about the Chinese presence in Gilgit really make my fresh creep. I am afraid that this will turn out to be another of those whirlwind courtships and romances that we have seen so often in Pakistani history, and that, as before, Pakistan will be left holding the baby.
Whether you believe it or not, my difficulties with CPEC are more to do with wishing Pakistan well than being envious and hoping that it will fail. Ever since it was created, Pakistan has held on to foreign apron-strings; whether in defence, with the Chinese currently replacing the Euro-American bloc, or in economics, with massive subvention from the oil-rich states whenever needed, or in the development of missile technology.
Once again, Pakistan has opted for the escalator instead of taking the stairs. I don't think it will work. All the monetisation of the work will flow back to China; key personnel will be Chinese; control will forever be in Chinese hands.
I am dreading another development.
If you leave aside Indian trolls and Pakistani super-patriots, and study the records and the history of the region, certain very uncomfortable facts will surface. Several of the Pamir Emirates were vassals of Kashgar; China already has a strong historical claim to the Gilgit region. Now, having invited them in, Pakistan will have to figure out how to get them out. All these articles about how strong the Chinese presence is getting in Pakistan as a whole, and all those unpublished, unprinted, untold stories about the Chinese presence in Gilgit really make my fresh creep. I am afraid that this will turn out to be another of those whirlwind courtships and romances that we have seen so often in Pakistani history, and that, as before, Pakistan will be left holding the baby.