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Will consider importing vegetables, other edible items from India: Pakistan



Pakistan, which is currently reeling from massive floods, may consider importing essential food items from India.

Addressing a press conference on Monday, Pakistan Finance Minister Miftah Ismail said that the government can ā€œconsider importing vegetables and other edible items from Indiaā€ to facilitate people after recent floods destroyed crops across the country, according to media reports. The ministerā€™s comment was in response to a question.

Pakistan is witnessing a massive surge in the prices of various vegetables and fruits because of the floods, which have resulted in supply-related challenges in vegetables in Balochistan, Sindh, and south Punjab. According to reports, floods have claimed over 1,100 lives, so far.

The India-Pakistan trade has been largely affected by the tensions between both nations. After India revoked the special status of Jammu and Kashmir in August 2019 by removing Sections of Article 370, the then Imran Khan government suspended all kinds of trade with India. But after the Covid-19 pandemic, Pakistan allowed imports of drugs and pharmaceuticals from India in May 2020.

Also Read: Saddened to see devastation caused by floods in Pakistan: PM Modi

India had also withdrawn the most-favoured-nation (MFN) status for Pakistan in February 2019. It imposed a 200 per cent tariff on all imports from Pakistan after the Pulwama terror attack.

However, it didnā€™t ban either exports to or imports from Pakistan.

Nisha Taneja, professor at Indian Council for Research on International Economic Relations (ICRIER), said that going ahead, the trade between India and Pakistan should not be limited to the flood disaster. There should be an effort to expand the list further.

ā€œThe decision provides a window to expand the positive list of items for trade from Pakistanā€™s side. Pakistan earlier had allowed the import of items, such as pharmaceuticals and related raw materials from India. It is expanding the list of items that can be imported from Indiaā€ Taneja said.

Despite the tensions between the two nations, Pakistanā€™s import from India has been rising since the beginning of the current financial year. During the first three months of FY23, Pakistan imported goods worth $204.83 million from India, up 73 per cent year-on-year, according to commerce and industry ministry data.

Sugar and pharmaceutical products were key imports. Apart from that Pakistan imported tea, spices, fruits and vegetables, and textiles, among others.

There were negligible imports by India from Pakistan (only to the tune of $17 million during the April-June quarter).

Total trade between the two countries stood at $2.6 billion in FY19 before disruptions. It plunged to $831 million, $329 million, and $516 million in FY20, FY21, and FY22, respectively.

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