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Pakistanis end up paying more for international brands

Dubious

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By Sumaiya Kamani
Published: December 10, 2018

1863493-mall-1544420307-813-640x480.jpg

A Reuters file photo of a shopping mall.

KARACHI: Standard prices of products offered by international retail brands, which are categorised as second-tier in global indices, mostly eat up a quarter of the average income of Pakistanis.

With every new product of international brands being priced higher than the originally stated ones, these brands are perceived to be ripping customers off with their wide profit margins.

According to the World Bank, Pakistan’s adjusted net national income per capita was $1,444 (nearly $120 per month) in 2016 whereas the price of a single top of international apparel brands like Debenhams, Mango, Next and Splash often exceeds a quarter of that income. This implies that these brands are targeting high-end customers unlike global trends.

According to an internal survey, prices of such international apparel brands in Pakistan sometimes hit double the original retail prices.

The difference in pricing is due to additional operational and logistics costs that these brands have to incur. A customer might find the price of a product at Mango’s store in Spain very reasonable when compared to the price of the same top of the franchise in Pakistan.

Talking about the price difference, Mango Head of Operation in Pakistan Waqas Yunous told The Express Tribune, “We do not deal in Spain’s pricing; we do not deal in international prices; we deal in local prices.”

He said there was an operational cost build-up and there were certain profit margins that the brand had to keep. Rising import costs including import duties and taxes, transportation cost, unstable exchange rate of the rupee and other operational costs played the role of a catalyst in the pricing strategy, he added.

The brand works on the markdown pricing model where the list price is brought down to a lower level to offer discounts. However, even the discounted price often exceeds the original retail rate.

These brands are inflating peoples’ appetite for apparels that are manufactured in countries like China, Bangladesh, Vietnam, South Korea, etc.

Being among the largest textile manufacturers, Pakistan also has the potential to manufacture these brands locally with some value addition, which could help save some of the operational and logistics costs. However, these franchises are restricted by the brands from manufacturing their products locally.

In some cases, brands like Levis have set up their manufacturing outlets in Pakistan, making it comparatively more convenient for retail stores and helping the national economy as well.

“Levis and Wrangler have their factory outlets in Pakistan where products are cheaper than the retail stores,” Pakistan Apparel Forum Chairman Javed Bilwani told The Express Tribune.

He said international brands usually did not have permission to run a manufacturing unit in Pakistan, making it difficult for them to get a licence.

Pakistan government could offer a policy to incentivise local production of these brands, similar to the auto policy of 2016, which has encouraged many international players like Kia, Volkswagen and Hyundai to enter Pakistan’s auto market.

Although the textile industry leads Pakistan’s overall exports, it has failed to gain a competitive edge in the global market. Pakistan needs to move to focus more on apparels to boost its growth.

Pakistan’s exports stood at around $23.2 billion in the previous fiscal year against an import bill of $60.8 billion, according to the Pakistan Bureau of Statistics.

On the contrary, Bangladesh’s total exports were around $36.67 billion, according to the Export Promotion Bureau of Bangladesh. Of these, exports of knitted or crocheted apparel or clothing articles amounted to $30.62 billion, which were around $7.4 billion higher than Pakistan’s overall exports.

The writer is a staff correspondent

https://tribune.com.pk/story/1863493/2-pakistanis-end-paying-international-brands/
 
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1) Stop importing branded stuff if you cant afford it! It is hurting the economy!
2) Mango isnt even a top brand and it is costly here in Pakistan!
3) Why arent we making value added goods? And if we do make, why cant we insure the bloody standard?
 
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This is an opportunity for local brands. Make good quality clothes, keep in mind fashion trends and you'll always sell more than the "designer brands".

Look at Next in the UK. Next don't sell designer labels instore (strangely they do online), they only sell their own designed produce, it's the most popular store on the high street.

Zara is another example, Zara are a bit more "trendy" than Next but again their products are all their own designs, sold at prices affordable to the general public.
 
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This is an opportunity for local brands. Make good quality clothes, keep in mind fashion trends and you'll always sell more than the "designer brands".

Look at Next in the UK. Next don't sell designer labels instore (strangely they do online), they only sell their own designed produce, it's the most popular store on the high street.

Zara is another example, Zara are a bit more "trendy" than Next but again their products are all their own designs, sold at prices affordable to the general public.
People are stupid.. specially women who are “brand conscious”..
 
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People are stupid.. specially women who are “brand conscious”..

Next and Zara have setup a brand too. You're right people are stupid, but companies should take advantage of that. If you look at the marketing for Zara and Next they present their clothes the same way designer brands do.

If I know I can get something that looks trendy, is made of decent quality, but costs 50% less, people will go for it. You just have to make people believe.
 
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1) Stop importing branded stuff if you cant afford it! It is hurting the economy!
2) Mango isnt even a top brand and it is costly here in Pakistan!
3) Why arent we making value added goods? And if we do make, why cant we insure the bloody standard?

Our businessmen are short term opportunists and greedy. They do not have the temperament, passion and vision to build brands. Brand making requires hard work, R&D, perseverance and strict adherence to standards but the greedy businessman thinks that why he should settle for one golden egg per day...so he slaughters the hen to get all the eggs at once but to his dismay, he ends up losing everything. Brand development needs marathon runners but we only get sprinters here.

People are stupid.. specially women who are “brand conscious”..
Not all women but a certain class with slave mentality.
 
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