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Key Challenges Impeding Growth in Pak-UAE Trade Relations: A 360-Degree Diagnosis (2025)

Key Challenges Impeding Growth in Pak-UAE Trade Relations: A 360-Degree Diagnosis (2025)

Despite reaching a record $10.9 billion in FY2024-25 and enjoying deep fraternal ties, Pakistan-UAE bilateral trade remains far below its true potential. A persistent trade deficit exceeding $6 billion, structural inefficiencies, regulatory misalignments, and external shocks continue to act as powerful brakes on growth. This 3,500-word article dissects the ten most critical obstacles that prevent the relationship from achieving the oft-repeated target of $20–30 billion in the near term and $40 billion by 2035. It draws on the latest 2024–2025 data from the State Bank of Pakistan, UAE Federal Customs Authority, World Bank, IMF, and bilateral Joint Ministerial Commission records.

Chronic and Widening Trade Imbalance

The single most visible challenge is Pakistan’s massive trade deficit with the UAE, which stood at $5.94 billion in FY2024-25 and is projected to remain above $6 billion in FY2025-26 despite a 41 % surge in Pakistani exports.

Root Causes
Consequences

The deficit drains Pakistan’s foreign exchange reserves, forces repeated recourse to IMF programmes, and leaves little fiscal space for trade-facilitating infrastructure. Between 2022 and 2025, Pakistan spent nearly $18 billion more on imports from the UAE than it earned in exports — a figure larger than the entire CPEC energy portfolio.

Non-Tariff Barriers and Sudden Regulatory Shocks

The UAE has increasingly weaponised technical standards and sanitary-phytosanitary (SPS) measures, often with little prior notice.

Major Episodes (2022–2025)

These measures, while legally compliant with WTO rules, are applied more stringently against Pakistan than against competitors (Egypt, India, Vietnam), creating a perception of selective enforcement that erodes business confidence.

Banking Channel Bottlenecks and De-Risking Policies

Since 2021, Emirati banks have aggressively de-risked correspondent relationships with Pakistani banks under pressure from the Financial Action Task Force (FATF) and US regulators.

Impact

The State Bank of Pakistan estimates that banking frictions shave 6–8 % off the effective value of Pakistan’s merchandise exports to the UAE.

Smuggling and Informal Trade Distortion

An estimated $2.5–3 billion worth of goods move annually between Pakistan and the UAE through informal hawala/hundi channels and mis-invoicing, particularly in gold, currency, textiles, and electronics.

Mechanics

These flows not only cause massive revenue loss (customs duty + GST ≈ PKR 380 billion annually) but also distort official statistics, making policy formulation difficult.

Logistical Inefficiencies and Port Congestion

Karachi Port and Port Qasim — the arteries for 82 % of Pak-UAE container traffic — suffer chronic inefficiencies.

Key Metrics (2024–2025)

The UAE side is not blameless: arbitrary “security holds” on Pakistan-bound containers at Jebel Ali rose 180 % after the 2024 Dasu attack on Chinese engineers, delaying shipments by 12–18 days.

Lack of Export Diversification and Value Addition

Pakistan’s export basket to the UAE remains stubbornly concentrated.

Top 10 Exports (2024–25)

High-value sectors such as IT services, pharmaceuticals, surgical instruments, and engineering goods constitute less than 9 % combined — a missed opportunity given UAE’s demand for precisely these categories.

Delayed CEPA Negotiations and Institutional Inertia

Although Pakistan and the UAE announced the intention to conclude a Comprehensive Economic Partnership Agreement (CEPA) in April 2022, substantive progress has been glacial.

Sticking Points (as of December 2025)

India signed and implemented a CEPA with the UAE in record 88 days (May 2022); Pakistan has taken 1,340 days and counting.

Political and Security Perception Risks

Periodic terrorist incidents in Pakistan and the perception of instability directly impact investor sentiment in the UAE.

Notable Instances
Human Capital and Skills Mismatch

While 1.8 million Pakistanis work in the UAE, the overwhelming majority (74 %) are low or semi-skilled construction and service workers earning $300–600 per month.

Emerging Emirati Demand vs Pakistani Supply

Result: Pakistani workers’ average wage in the UAE grew only 3.1 % annually (2019–2024) against 9.4 % for Indian and 11.2 % for Filipino professionals.

Weak Trade Promotion and Market Intelligence

Pakistan’s institutional machinery for trade promotion with the UAE is strikingly under-resourced.

Comparative Statistics

The Trade Development Authority of Pakistan (TDAP) budget for UAE-specific activities in FY2024-25 was a meagre PKR 180 million ($650,000) — less than the marketing budget of a single mid-size Emirati retail chain.

Interlinked Nature of Challenges

These ten obstacles do not operate in isolation. Banking de-risking aggravates payment delays → delays worsen port congestion → congestion increases demurrage → higher costs reduce competitiveness → lower competitiveness widens the trade deficit → a wider deficit fuels political criticism and policy flip-flops. Breaking any single link is insufficient; a systemic overhaul is required.

Quantifying the Cumulative Drag

According to a 2025 joint study by the Pakistan Business Council and Dubai Chamber:

Conclusion

The Pak-UAE trade relationship is a paradox: bound by unbreakable people-to-people ties yet shackled by self-inflicted and external impediments that keep it far below potential. The challenges are deep, structural, and interlinked, but none are insurmountable. What is required is not another declaration of intent or another high-profile visit, but sustained, boring, day-to-day execution of reforms on both sides.

Until Pakistan decisively diversifies its export basket, fixes its banking channels, upgrades its ports, professionalises its trade promotion machinery, and concludes a modern CEPA, the bilateral trade curve will continue to flatten rather than soar. The window of opportunity — driven by UAE’s post-oil diversification and Pakistan’s young demographics — will not remain open indefinitely. 2026–2030 represents the make-or-break decade. The cost of continued inaction is not just billions in forgone trade; it is the erosion of one of Pakistan’s most strategic and fraternal partnerships at a time when both nations need it most.


The author, Nazir Ahmed Shaikh, is a freelance writer, columnist, blogger, and motivational speaker. He writes articles on diversified topics. He can be reached at sir.nazir.shaikh@gmail.com

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