In an era when digitalization is at its height, Pakistan managed to register a 7% year-on-year growth in IT exports remittances, hitting $214 million in July 2023, up from $199 million the previous year.
However, according to official data from the State Bank of Pakistan, these figures represent a 5% month-on-month fall from $224 million in June 2023.
To provide some context, the bank reduced its initial estimates of sector export remittances from $2.605 billion to $2.593 billion for fiscal year 2022-23.
IT and ITeS Exports of Pakistan
Indeed, Information Technology and IT-enabled Services (ITeS) export remittances have fallen short of the set target of $3 billion for fiscal year 2022-23 by about 14 percent, standing at $2.593 billion versus $2.619 billion in fiscal year 2021-22.
The IT and ITeS sectors, which include telecommunications, computer, and information services, reached a new high of $2.619 billion in fiscal year 2022, representing a 47.43 percent increase over the previous year’s total of $2.108 billion.
However, official data revealed that the sector’s export remittances fell short of the target established for fiscal year 2022-23. Several elements were discovered to be accountable for this situation.
Failure to execute agreed-upon incentives, combined with policy inconsistency, contributed considerably to this shortage.
These were compounded by the devastating effect of unresolved tax and financial difficulties.
All of this has placed a major pressure on generating ideal levels of IT and ITeS export remittances.
MoITT Aim of $5 billion in IT Exports by June 2023
In response to the growing dominance of digital trends throughout industries around the world, the Ministry of Information Technology and Telecommunication established an ambitious aim of $5 billion in IT exports by June 2023.
They also threw caution to the wind, warning that failure to execute agreed incentives, combined with policy inconsistencies and unresolved tax and banking-related concerns, would disfavor telecom industry export remittances and jeopardize Pakistan’s digital agenda.
As a result, it is critical that the difficulties ailing the IT and ITeS industries be solved as soon as possible. These sectors not only have the potential to strengthen Pakistan’s economy, but they also represent a tremendous chance to establish the country as a worldwide IT center if properly handled.
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