Cotton crisis

Published

PAKISTAN’S declining cotton economy is rapidly turning into a case study in policy contradiction.

Amid endless official rhetoric of an agricultural revival for export-led growth, the country is witnessing a surge in cotton imports even before the start of the new harvest. It is not simply the result of temporary domestic supply shortages; it is also the failure of cotton policy over many years.

The import order of 206,000 bales from the US — nearly the entire quantity of US cotton sold during the week — highlights the severity of the domestic supply crisis. Imports from Brazil are also rising sharply. Such large-scale imports before the arrival of the local crop are extraordinary and signal that our cotton supply chain is now structurally dependent on foreign supplies.

The consequences go beyond the farm sector or the downstream textile industry. Cotton imports could cost Pakistan billions of dollars.

For an economy struggling with chronic dollar shortages, weak reserves and recurring balance-of-payments crises, this is alarming.

That Pakistan is increasingly importing what it once produced competitively in quantities sufficient to feed its textile industry, sustain rural incomes and reduce pressure on foreign exchange reserves speaks volumes about the extent of the policy rot. We now have a cycle of shrinking output leading to increased imports.

Higher imports drain foreign exchange, and the ensuing external pressures either lead back to demand compression and reduction in textile exports or to another balance-of-payments crisis. The demand for tax relief, lower energy tariffs and reduced levies underline the financial stress across the value chain.

However, such incentives alone will not reverse the decline. We need a coherent long-term cotton strategy focused on research, seed development, water conservation, crop incentives and protection of agricultural institutions from political and commercial encroachment — or else, Pakistan might lose a key pillar of its export economy.

Published in Dawn, May 27th, 2026

Opinion

Editorial

Beyond headcounts
Updated 11 Jul, 2026

Beyond headcounts

WORLD Population Day has traditionally prompted discussions on population growth and fertility rates. This year’s...
Relying on remittances
11 Jul, 2026

Relying on remittances

NO matter how important workers’ remittances are, the record inflow of $41.6bn in FY26 should remind us of the...
Official passports
11 Jul, 2026

Official passports

OUR lawmakers’ sense of entitlement is jarring. Through a set of three laws, the MPAs of KP have quietly granted...
Balochistan carnage
Updated 10 Jul, 2026

Balochistan carnage

THE security situation in Balochistan remains alarming, with a recent uptick in terrorist violence resulting in a...
Misusing land
10 Jul, 2026

Misusing land

THE Federal Constitutional Court’s ruling that land acquired for a specific purpose cannot later be converted into...
India’s film ban
10 Jul, 2026

India’s film ban

IN India, creative boundaries are tight. Its far-right regime prefers facts fictionalised and communities demonised...