I explained why local industries aren't growing and FDI is literally worthless in comparison to building your own brands.
FDI is not that great hence why so many countries have rules regarding it including restrictions on foreign ownership, obligatory screening and approval procedures, restrictions on foreign nationals managing operations or even working in affiliate companies, etc...?
The foreign manufacturers that setup shop in Pakistan aren't relocating for the purposes of generating exports to earn the country foreign exchange instead their main and many times only goal, as you've already seen with Suzuki, is to manufacture to meet domestic consumption requirements and though its better than importing ultimately you're still losing foreign exchange in the form of royalties, revenue sharing, etc...
In comparison to the OECD average not only is the Phillipines, which is doing significantly better than Pakistan, one of the most FDI restrictive nations on the planet but it's even more restrictive than China which along with nations such as Indonesia, South Korea and Canada are some of the most restrictive to FDI in the organization.
What Pakistan needs is government directed investment into Pakistanin brand development and manufacturing.
Compare China and South Korea, both saw an end to their civil wars only 3 years apart in the 50s but while South Korea built up its own brands like Samsung, Hyundai, LG, etc... without the mineral wealth the Chinese possessed the latter was content with becoming the world's sweatshop.
Now the South Korean GDP per capita is 300% higher than China's and the latter has learned what I'm trying to tell you the hard way only now developing its own brands like NIO (future competitor to Tesla), Huawei (competitor for Samsung and Apple), Baidou (competitor to Google), etc...
Not sure why Khan even said he wanted to "learn from China" unless he doesn't understand what China did to get where it is (ex. no minimum wage laws until 1993, total ban on trade unions that protect workers and negotiates better wages on their behalf, a total disregard for environmental protections, one child policy that f*cked up their demography, etc...).
Furthermore I don't see anyone being able to replicate the China model because that's not the direction business is moving with increasingly localized manufacturing as automation takes over to reduce shipping costs, impact of tariffs on lost revenues, prevent disruptions due to wars and disease, etc...
What I'm trying to say here is that this isn't sustainable and the country is in real danger.
The whole Pakistani economy, as Riaz Haq's post highlighted, is literally surviving on loans and remittances.
Government revenues finance those social welfare programs you guys are promoting but remember those revenues are derived from profits generated by government owned businesses and taxes whether they're property taxes, business and personal income taxes, sales taxes, etc...
Without industrial growth there is NO WAY you can continue to finance these social welfare programs let alone pay off Pakistan's debt obligations or appropriately budget the military to create the independent nation Pakistani's strive for it to be. Instead Pakistan will watch as it is increasingly unable to do anything regionally or globally completely subservient to foreign interests which, a lot of the time, is destabilizing because it can't stop taking loans while our people are forced to live abroad and work in foreign countries many times without due rights or in extreme danger (ex. Christchurch) making Pakistan highly sensitive to anything that would endanger remittances.
If you look at Pakistan's 2019-2020 budget they cite both the initial budgeted and later revised figures for the 2018-2019 financial year. What we see is that the government spent 26% more than they collected in revenues and almost 58% of what was spent went into servicing existing debt and paying off the principal of the loans (the bulk of it went into servicing debt).
Pakistan Budget in Brief 2019-2020
Pakistan now imports 200% more than it exports on dollar terms when just before the '97 re-election of Nawaz Sharif Pakistan was an export surplus nation with relatively balanced trade for almost its entire history.
How is this sustainable?
This isn't going to get any better the way things are going:
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If the government wants to lift people out of poverty and help them then invest in industry so they can earn money and pay for their kids education and healthcare as well as afford decent housing and access to electricity and clean water. Eventually we'll be in a position where the government could afford universal healthcare and a myriad of other social welfare programs.
What would have been far better compared to healthcare and education spending would have been increased spending on low income housing which is something I've talked about in the past should have a massive impact on the country's economy considering our housing crisis is the worst in the region just shy of Afghanistan.