Pakistan’s $8 Billion FDI Miss: How CPEC’s Second Phase Failed to Deliver

Pakistan's Investment Minister Qaiser Ahmed Sheikh admitted the country lost over $8bn in foreign direct investment, primarily from China, between 2018 and 2024. The failure is attributed to successive governments' inability to develop industrial infrastructure and Special Economic Zones (SEZs) under the CPEC initiative. Only four SEZs advanced beyond planning, deterring export-oriented Chinese investment and missing promised job generation. The article warns that while rising costs in China offer a new opportunity, success requires credible, predictable ecosystems, not episodic policy attention.

Key Points: Pakistan Missed $8bn FDI from China: CPEC Failure

  • Pakistan missed $8bn FDI, mostly from China, between 2018-2024
  • Only 4 SEZs moved beyond planning in over a decade
  • Investors entered for domestic market, not export-oriented manufacturing
  • Rising costs in China offer narrow window for relocation
2 min read

How Pakistan missed $8bn FDI opportunity from China

Pakistan lost $8bn in FDI from China due to failed SEZs, admits Investment Minister Qaiser Ahmed Sheikh, highlighting a decade of missed industrial opportunities.

"The gap between ambition and delivery is too wide to ignore. - Dawn article"

New Delhi, May 8

Pakistan's Investment Minister Qaiser Ahmed Sheikh has admitted that the country has lost an opportunity to attract over $8bn in foreign direct investment, mostly from China, and generate half a million industrial jobs between 2018 and 2024, according to an article in the local media.

What the minister said is also an indictment of successive governments that have remained in power since the launch of the multi-billion-dollar CPEC initiative, the Dawn reported.

By not paying sustained attention to building the industrial infrastructure, they have consistently failed to attract foreign investment and facilitate the promised relocation of Chinese industry. While Islamabad was able to secure significant Chinese debt financing for large energy and transport infrastructure projects during the early harvest period of the CPEC initiative, its failure to develop the planned SEZs for investors has proved detrimental to the promise of relocation of private Chinese capital and industries in Pakistan, the article observed.

The gap between ambition and delivery is too wide to ignore. The fact that only four SEZs have moved beyond the planning stage in over a decade exposes the deeper failure of execution. This underperformance highlights policymakers' persistent inability to treat industrialisation as a long-term national priority, the article lamented.

Since the launch of the CPEC, policymakers have repeatedly emphasised infrastructure and energy, but have always envisaged the transition to industrial development as the "second phase", which was neither prepared for nor planned. The result has been predictable: investor hesitation and missed opportunities. One of the stated aims of establishing these zones was to attract export-oriented foreign investment. The investors were expected to use Pakistan as a manufacturing base to export goods back to China and help bridge the widening trade imbalance, or to serve their existing markets elsewhere. Yet the few firms that did enter Pakistan largely did so to tap into its domestic market, rather than to establish export-oriented manufacturing bases, the article stated.

The article further noted that the minister is right to point to another opportunity for Pakistan. Rising costs in China and the ongoing rearrangement of global supply chains offer Pakistan a window, albeit narrow, to woo labour-intensive, export-oriented manufacturing. However, this opportunity will not materialise through declarations. Competing regional economies from Vietnam to Bangladesh have shown that success in industrial relocation depends on credible, predictable ecosystems, and not episodic policy attention, it pointed out.

- IANS

Share this article:

Reader Comments

S
Sneha F
$8 billion is a huge amount! 😮 But honestly, when I visited Pakistan a few years ago for a conference, I noticed the lack of industrial infrastructure. The special economic zones there are just empty plots with promises. Meanwhile, our own SEZs in India are actually functioning, attracting Chinese companies. Pakistan needs to get its act together fast, or this window will close permanently.
N
Nikhil C
The article rightly points out that only 4 SEZs moved beyond planning in over a decade. That's pathetic for any country wanting to attract FDI. Pakistan's policymakers treat industrialisation as an afterthought, always prioritising short-term political gains over long-term economic planning. China's Belt and Road was a golden opportunity, but they squandered it by not creating a predictable business ecosystem. Now with global supply chains shifting, they might miss the bus again.
A
Arun Y
As an Indian, I find this situation instructive. We've had our own challenges with SEZs, but at least we've moved forward with actual projects. Pakistan's failure shows that political will and consistent policy are non-negotiable. The minister's admission is honest, but honesty without action is meaningless. They need to study what made Vietnam and Bangladesh successful - stability, labour laws, and investor-friendly policies. Time is running out.
R
Riya H
I feel a bit sorry for Pakistan's investors who believed the hype. CPEC was supposed to be a game-changer, but instead they got empty promises and white elephants. The Chinese firms that did come only wanted to sell to the local market, not export. That tells you everything about the investment climate. India has its own issues with ease of doing business, but at least we have functioning ports, roads, and power grids. Pakistan needs a complete overhaul.

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

Leave a Comment

Minimum 50 characters 0/50