Abstract:
The purpose of this research was to provide a comprehensive analysis of international trade
in order to evaluate and determine the challenges it poses, and opportunities, it offers to Pakistan’s
Cotton, Textile and Apparel Sector. The research is based on secondary data sources. World Bank,
WTO, UNCTAD, and a lot of other valuable and authentic reports from the authors of repute have
been consulted to understand the increasingly complex international trade relations in a globalizing
world. Volumes of government reports, position papers, handouts and books have been searched to
appreciate the dynamics of Pakistan Cotton, Textile and Apparel Sector.
The research thesis endeavors to capture where the challenge is. What is at stake? Who are
the players? What are the opportunities in the international market place? How these challenges can
be translated in to opportunities? Brief account of recent trade development and the relationship
between global and domestic trading arrangements have been discussed. Role of politics in shaping
decisions and managing power both at domestic and global level, significance of international
commitments, and influence of historical, cultural back grounds, shared ideas and beliefs, and
individual mind set in competing interests in the domestic economy have also been dilated upon.
Analytical findings reveal that Pakistan has comparative edge on the basis of comparative
advantage, reveal comparative advantage, relative trade advantage, and trade complementarities. The
estimated value of revealed comparative advantage of cotton in Pakistan is 18 which is very high
than unity which implies that Pakistan has great opportunities in the export of cotton and cotton
manufacturing. Moreover, the estimated values of balasa and Lafay index for all cotton and cotton
products are very high which reveal that Pakistan has trade competitiveness in the cotton and cotton
manufacturing. The estimated value of relative trade index for primary products, cotton seed, cake of
cotton seed and cotton linter, are positive which imply that these products are highly competitive,
while oil of cotton seed and cake of cotton seed are uncompetitive. Furthermore, the value of trade
complementarities variable for USA, EU, Japan and Canada (trading countries) are greater than unity
except SAARC countries. This means that trading with SAARC countries in cotton and cotton
products is less profitable as compared to other countries where cotton trading is highly profitable.
Still domestic resource cost analysis (DRC) proves that Pakistan has greater opportunities in cotton
production. The values of reveal comparative advantage and relative trade advantage further suggest
that Pakistan has greater opportunities and prospects for exporting cotton and cotton manufacturing.
Similarly trade complementarities show and suggest that Pakistan should focus on Middle East
market with highest trade complementarities, followed by Canada, USA, EU, SAARC countries and
then Japan. Bt transgenic cotton is widely grown in the cotton growing areas of Sindh and Punjab.
Bt cotton can play a significant role to enhance agricultural productivity as the productivity
of cotton in Pakistan is 0.5 ton/ha as compared productivity of Bt cotton in China is 9 ton/ha which
implies a huge cotton productivity gap. This gap can be narrowed down by the adoption of Bt cotton
in Pakistan which will have major impact on food security efforts in the country. Urgent efforts are
required to focus on cost efficiency, higher productivity with quality of cotton, export diversification
of cotton products, export oriented policy and market perspective to become more competitive in the
global cotton market. There is also a need to strengthen the cotton - textile value chain with back
ward and forward linkages. Unique products have to be developed, and a shift from comparative
advantage to competitive advantage is the way forward.