A Japanese business enclave on 200 acres in the vicinity of Port Qasim is being planned, for which a team of Pakistan-Japan Business Forum (PJBF) met the Port Qasim Authority officials. A conceptual approval for the project was given by Dr Salman Shah, former advisor on finance, in 2005.
The negotiations are being held immediately after finalising a draft action report on Japanese investment potentials in
“The business forums in both
The joint study group has focused mainly on shipping, agro-based industry, textiles, infrastructure projects and agriculture.
“Japanese always take a long-term view of the situation and are not easily dismayed,’’ remarked a top executive of one of the automobile business group that assembles Japanese vehicles.
Japanese direct foreign investment in 2007-08 showed a sharp rise of 133 per cent to $131 million from $64 million in 2006-07. “Bulk of the investment was in automobiles’’, market sources say. About $300 million was invested by Japanese investors in last four years of which a considerable share went to automobiles.
“Fast improvement in growth, generous credit assistance from banks and financial institutions for auto purchases pushed up demand that lured Japanese to invest’’, a senior executive of an automobile company said.
“Japanese will still look at power sector with interest if good projects are designed’’, a Pakistani executive working in a Japanese firm said.
At present, there are 35 companies in
Also coming in production in next 12 to 18 months is a steel mills being set up with Japanese investment. It is a state of art technology that would produce quality steel products.
Almost 72 per cent of Japanese investment in Sindh is in automobile industry that assembles from big trucks to four wheelers and motorcycles. About 8.4 per cent investment is in metal products, more than six per cent in financial sector, 4.6 per cent in power and 9.2 per cent in other sectors.
Trade pattern between the two countries has changed considerably in the last few years. For a very long period, yarn had remained the main commodity of export. There were frequent occasions, during decades of eighties and nineties, when Japanese authorities clamped down anti-dumping duties. Japanese imported mainly textile machinery and equipment.
Apart from cotton yarn, minerals and petroleum products are also exported to
Always in favour of
On official level,
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