ISLAMABAD: Pakistan will gradually cut tariffs on the auto sector over the next five years and work on a strategy to expand exports, Commerce Minister Jam Kamal Khan told industry representatives on Wednesday, as the government seeks to strengthen the local market and boost overseas sales.
Khan met auto industry stakeholders in Islamabad and announced the formation of a committee, comprising officials from the Commerce Ministry, the Federal Board of Revenue and the Ministry of Industries, to address sector challenges. The minister invited the industry to participate in the upcoming industrial policy and said healthy competition was increasing in Pakistan’s auto market.
“After tractors and motorcycles, we will now also export cars,” Khan said, adding that the government would prepare “a strategy for the development and exports of the auto sector” and that tariffs “will be gradually reduced over the next five years.”
Khan said imported used cars should meet quality and environment-friendly standards and linked new export prospects to a recently signed US tariff reduction agreement. Under the deal, Washington has cut import duties on Pakistani goods to 19 percent, a move the government says will improve competitiveness for products including automobiles.






