LAHORE: Pakistan needs to change its investment priorities to focus on delivering education, health and jobs to its people beside developing a coherent industrial strategy combined with structural reforms to increase exports.

These were concluding remarks made at the second day of the annual conference by the Lahore School of Economics on “Management of the Pakistan Economy” which focused on issues of innovation, female employment, skills development of workers and Pakistani trade.

Dr Rabia Arif of the LSE looked at how innovation in the textile sector, the light engineering sector and the automotive sector differs. She found that most of the textile manufacturers surveyed were exporters engaged in product innovation to increase revenues and decrease costs.

In the light engineering sector, firms engage in process and marketing innovations but this leads to higher costs and lower revenues. In the automotive sector, larger firms engage in product and marketing innovations to increase their revenues.

“The results showed that innovation in the textile sector, which is an export-intensive sector, tend to be different from innovations in the light engineering and automotive sectors which mostly cater to the domestic market,” she said.

Dr. Hamna Ahmed and Zunia Tirmazee of the Lahore School of Economics and Rebecca Wu of the University of Chicago discussed the impact of a training initiative by the Punjab Skills Development Fund which focused on providing access to online training courses for workers in rural and urban Punjab. They found that workers who had completed online training courses transitioned into work more than those who did not, and also gained more income after completing the courses.

Dr Zunia Saif Tirmazee of LSE and Sakina Shibuya from the University of Wisconsin discussed the factors that may hinder firms from hiring women. They looked at the impact of social norms as well as economic factors like the cost of transportation for women and the cost of training for women in firms.LSE Rector Dr. Shahid Amjad Chaudhry concluded the moot with a discussion of how the dramatic fall in Pakistan’s growth rate, with almost zero per cent growth last year and an expected growth of only two per cent this year, has led to an increase in poverty and how transfers to low income households through programmes like the Benazir Income Support Program (BISP) must be significantly increased to help lower income households.

He also discussed how the provinces must take the lead role in development and economic growth, by investing in health and education and increasing productivity.

Published in Dawn, April 20th, 2024

Opinion

Editorial

A hasty retreat
Updated 28 Nov, 2024

A hasty retreat

Govt should not extend its campaign of violence against PTI and its leaders, thinking it now has the upper hand. Enough is enough.
Lebanon truce
28 Nov, 2024

Lebanon truce

WILL it hold? That is the question many in the Middle East and beyond will be asking after a 60-day ceasefire ...
MDR anomaly removed
28 Nov, 2024

MDR anomaly removed

THE State Bank’s decision to remove its minimum deposit rate requirement for conventional banks on deposits from...
Islamabad march
Updated 27 Nov, 2024

Islamabad march

WITH emotions running high, chaos closes in. As these words were being written, rumours and speculation were all...
Policing the internet
27 Nov, 2024

Policing the internet

IT is chilling to witness how Pakistan — a nation that embraced the freedoms of modern democracy, and the tech ...
Correcting sports priorities
27 Nov, 2024

Correcting sports priorities

IT has been a lingering battle that has cast a shadow over sports in Pakistan: who are the national sports...