
Pakistani and Chinese Firms Sign Seven Billion Dollar Trade Deals
Pakistani and Chinese companies have signed trade and investment agreements worth seven billion dollars, marking one of the largest single-round commercial deal packages between private and state-linked entities from both countries. The signing ceremony underscores the deepening economic integration between Pakistan and China beyond state-level frameworks such as CPEC.
The deals span multiple sectors including manufacturing, agriculture, energy, and technology, reflecting the breadth of commercial interest Chinese firms have developed in the Pakistani market. Pakistani companies, in turn, stand to gain access to Chinese capital, technology transfer, and export markets, which could provide meaningful relief to the country's struggling current account position.
The agreements come at a strategically significant moment, as Pakistan works to attract foreign direct investment to stabilise its economy and reduce dependence on multilateral loans. Chinese commercial investment, if fully executed, would represent a substantial injection into the real economy beyond infrastructure financing.
Analysts will closely monitor the pace of implementation, as the gap between announced deals and actual disbursement has historically been wide in Pakistan-China commercial engagement. Nonetheless, the scale of the signing represents a strong signal of confidence from Chinese corporate actors in the Pakistani market.
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