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Photographer: Asim Hafeez/Bloomberg Photographer: Asim Hafeez/Bloomberg

Pakistan is considering offering tax breaks to various industries with export potential as it looks beyond textiles to boost outbound trade, an adviser to Prime Minister Imran Khan said.

Imran Khan Photographer: Thomas Peter/AFP via Getty Images

Engineering, chemicals, technology and footwear are among 20 sectors identified for incentives, Abdul Razak Dawood, the commerce and investment adviser to the prime minister, said in an interview in Islamabad. An export policy will be announced next month, he said.

Growing exports from the current over $20 billion a year is Pakistan’s plan to increase foreign exchange earnings and end a chronic boom-and-bust cycle. The South Asian nation was this year forced to turn to the International Monetary Fund for a bailout -- its 13th since the late 1980s -- to avoid a balance of payments crisis.

“I am in favor of limited time-bound incentives,” Dawood said, indicating a three- to four-year period for tax breaks. He opposed concessions for the textile industry, saying “they have gone to the point that it is a drug.”

Textiles currently account for about 60% of Pakistan’s total exports. The new plan complements the central bank’s aim to offer cheap credit to export-oriented industries to diversify that basket.

Read: Ending Pakistan’s Boom-Bust Cycle Is Central Bank’s New Plan

“If we want to go to $100 billion or $200 billion exports like Malaysia or Thailand, you ain’t gonna do it on textile,” said Dawood, who was previously chairman of Lahore-based Descon Engineering Ltd.

The nation’s exporters also stand to gain from the central bank’s move to devalue the currency by almost half, besides the government’s move to remove duty on some raw materials used for exports and lower utility prices.

Pakistan’s exports, particularly textiles, became competitive after the rupee’s devaluation and duty cuts, Dawood said, citing a 36% jump in quantity of garments shipments. “It means that we are getting market share, we are taking somebody’s market share.”

Pakistan’s trade deficit narrowed 33% to $9.7 billion in the five months to November, as imports dropped by 18% and exports rose 5% in the same period.

Dawood said he sees outbound shipments growing to $24.5-$25 billion this fiscal year ending June from $23 billion last year.

China Market

Pakistan is pinning hopes on a new free-trade agreement with China to grow overseas shipments by at least $500 million annually. The agreement, which takes effect next month, will help Islamabad reduce its trade gap with Beijing from the current $12 billion, according to data compiled by Bloomberg News.

Dawood said he is seeing interest from Chinese companies that want to set up factories in Pakistan and use them as a hub for exports.

The two bordering nations have gotten close in recent years with Pakistan being a flagship market for China’s Belt and Road Initiative. China planned to finance projects valued at $60 billion since 2015 and has helped end the nation’s chronic energy blackouts.

For low value added engineering products “we are much cheaper than China now,” Dawood said, adding that the plan for the next China international import exhibition is to have only an engineering pavilion. “We got to get out of the textiles syndrome.”