Overall textile exports from Pakistan continued to present a dismal picture for another year. By this, the industry has been rendered unviable by the high cost of doing business as a consequence of which textile exports fell further by $600 million, said All Pakistan Textile Mills Association (Aptma) chairman, Aamir Fayyaz.
Total exports of the country are understood to have fallen by $1.2 billion in the current year as per the present trend. Foreign exchange receipts on trade account are important to be revived and given a new impetus to arrest the country’s trade deficit that has swelled to an alarming and unmanageable level of $28.3 billion, the Aptma official added.
He further said that owing to unrealistically high energy costs, the textile industry continued to face the handicap of being 10 per cent more expensive against international competitors. He also claimed that since 2013, the price of energy has been higher than that of competing countries by 4 cents per kilowatt hour.
According to Fayyaz due to unrealistically high energy prices in the province where 70 per cent of the country’s textile industry is located, the Punjab-based textile industry was exposed to a severe disparity in energy prices. Resultantly, a bulk of the textile manufacturing capacity lies under utilised and over 70 textile mills have shut down in the last six months. The two basic raw materials of textile industry, cotton and man-made fibres to which the textile industry adds value for export have to be imported as their domestic availability falls far short of the industry’s requirement.
Lastly, Fayyaz rued that the completely oblivious approach of the government to this scenario and its subjection of raw materials to increased import duty besides other levies such as sales tax and withholding tax is indeed regrettable and denies the textile industry raw material availability at competitive and viable prices. Besides, the presumptive and innovative tax regime in the country is an additional burden on the organised segment of the textile industry.