Pakistan’s declining export performance, despite years of tariff protection, is threatening its competitiveness and long-term economic prospects, the World Bank has warned in its latest policy assessment.
Exports have shrunk to just over 10% of GDP in 2024, down from more than 15% in the 1990s — one of the lowest shares in the region and among middle-income economies.
In the report titled ‘From Inward to Outward: Pakistan’s Shift Towards Export-led Growth’, the World Bank said the slide reflects worsening constraints on businesses, compounded by recent policy shifts towards higher tariffs.

“Pakistan’s tariff structure — characterised by high average protection rates, cascading import duties, and ad hoc exemptions — has become a barrier to export-led growth,” the report said, noting that tariff rates have risen steadily since reaching their lowest levels in the early 2000s.
Pakistan’s goods exports rose 6.25% year-on-year to $26.86 billion in the first 10 months of FY25, according to data released by the Pakistan Bureau of Statistics (PBS) earlier this month.
The World Bank’s assessment highlighted structural weaknesses in Pakistan’s trade policy and recommended transferring tariff-setting authority from the Federal Board of Revenue (FBR) to the National Tariff Board.