Macroregional Context

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Pakistan becomes central market for Uzbek manufacturers through expanded trade operations

Karachi’s industrial landscape is drawing renewed attention from Central Asian exporters as Uzbekistan systematically expands its commercial footprint across Pakistan. In late June, over 30 Uzbek entrepreneurs gathered at the «Made in Uzbekistan» trading house to present their goods, services, and investment proposals directly to Pakistan’s business community. Organized by Uzbekistan’s Chamber of Commerce and Industry, its Embassy in Pakistan, and Karachi’s Chamber of Commerce, the forum demonstrated a shift toward sustained, infrastructure-backed trade relationships rather than sporadic commercial missions.

Focus on manufacturing sectors

The convergence of entrepreneurs produced concrete outcomes across multiple industrial segments. During B2B negotiating sessions, participants pursued partnership opportunities in textiles, leather and footwear manufacturing, medical equipment, and construction materials — sectors that align directly with Pakistan’s industrial priorities. Rather than generic trade promotion, the forum featured detailed presentations on Uzbekistan’s investment climate, export competitiveness, and logistical advantages along emerging regional corridors. Preliminary agreements were reached on developing cooperative links, establishing joint ventures, and launching import-export operations.

Institutional infrastructure taking shape

What distinguishes this expansion is its structural foundation. Trading houses have already opened in Lahore and Karachi, positioning themselves as permanent bases for direct entrepreneur-to-entrepreneur contact. These facilities showcase Uzbek products — from dried fruits and leather to pharmaceuticals, textiles, and construction goods — creating year-round visibility rather than relying on periodic forums. Both nations have committed to holding business forums at minimum twice annually in each country, with coordinated regional visits and specialized business missions planned. To push bilateral trade toward the established $2 billion target, authorities are working to expand product categories covered by preferential trade agreements and streamline customs and phytosanitary procedures.

Significance for international business

For international companies in manufacturing, construction materials, textiles, leather goods, and supply chain design, these developments carry strategic weight. Pakistan’s industrial sectors are actively diversifying supplier relationships and exploring regional co-manufacturing opportunities. Uzbekistan’s systematic establishment of trading infrastructure, combined with scheduled bilateral business forums and improving trade facilitation measures, indicates a market opening with institutional backing. Companies with operations or interests in Central or South Asia should monitor emerging cooperation frameworks and manufacturing partnerships emerging between these nations — these could reshape sectoral supply chains and create new distribution pathways across the broader region.

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