In the first eleven months of the current fiscal year 2022–23, Pakistan’s export remittances for IT and IT-enabled services (ITeS) fell by 1% to $2.369 billion from $2.383 billion in the corresponding period of the previous fiscal year.
The sector’s export remittances climbed by almost 28 percent to $236 million in May 2023 compared to $184 million in May 2022, according to the official figures.
This is the greatest amount of monthly exports observed since December 2022, said Arif Habib Limited.
Technology exports were up by 28% YoY during May’23, the highest monthly exports since Dec’22
During May’23, technology exports were up by 28% YoY (+24% MoM) to $ 236mn.
During 11MFY23, technology recorded exports worth $ 2,369mn (36% of the overall services’ exports) marking a… pic.twitter.com/Y13lkquTlO— Arif Habib Limited (@ArifHabibLtd) June 19, 2023
The sector’s export remittances climbed by 24 percent month over month from $191 million in April 2023.
IT Exports of Pakistan in Fiscal Year 2022
The export remittances for IT and ITeS, which include telecommunication, computer, and information services, increased by 47.43 percent to an all-time high of $2.618 billion in fiscal year 2022 from $2.108 billion in fiscal year 2021.
The $5 billion objective for IT exports had been anticipated by the Ministry of Information Technology and Telecommunication to be reached by June 2023.
The government had also been forewarned, nevertheless, that the telecom sector’s export remittances might suffer in addition to jeopardizing its digital vision due to the non-implementation of agreed incentives, lack of uniformity in policy, and other factors.
Recent information regarding Pakistan’s information technology exports, which total over $5 billion but are only officially registered at $2.5 billion, was sent to the National Assembly Standing Committee on Information Technology and Telecommunication.
Sector analysts claimed that the decline in export remittances from the IT and ITeS industries has caused fundamental anxieties and apprehensions in the IT industry due to the stalling of IT exports and a potential contraction on the horizon.
They emphasized that in order to align foreign exchange, taxation, corporate rules, export, and investment policies with global best practices, the FBR, the SBP, the SECP, the TDAP, and the PSEB should cooperate.
Pakistani IT exports are anticipated to be in the $2.5–2.6 billion range this year; they could easily increase to the psychological mark of $5 billion in a matter of two years if policies of the government institutions change to be more business-friendly and concentrate on the ease of doing business (EODB) criteria, on which Pakistan ranks abhorrently low at number 108, they added.
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