By Andrea Shalal
WASHINGTON, Feb 21 (Reuters) - Pakistan is looking for
breakthroughs in agriculture and information technology during
the first ministerial level meeting of a U.S.-Pakistani trade
and investment body in seven years, Pakistan's commerce minister
said on Tuesday.
Commerce Minister Syed Naveed Qamar will meet on Thursday
with U.S. Trade Representative Katherine Tai and other senior
U.S. officials under the U.S.-Pakistan Trade and Investment
Framework Agreement (TIFA).
Qamar told Reuters the meeting would strengthen ties between
the two countries that had been strained in recent years by
political tensions, and could help boost bilateral trade in
goods and services, which the Pakistani embassy said now
totalled about $12 billion.
"It is important that we start talking," he said. "These
were supposed to be annual meetings, but for one reason or
another, they have been on the backburner for so long. Now that
we are starting, there are many areas where we expect some
breakthroughs, and that is on both sides."
No comment was immediately available from Tai's office,
which included the meeting in its public calendar.
Ties between Islamabad and Washington, once close allies,
have just started to warm after some years of frosty relations,
mostly due to concerns about Pakistan's alleged support of the
Taliban in Afghanistan. Pakistan denies this support.
Qamar said Pakistan was looking to increase its exports of
mangoes to the United States, and ensure smooth, increased trade
in information technology and computer programming services. The
U.S. side was looking to boost exports of beef and soybeans.
"When we talk about trade, we're talking about the entire
spectrum, but we're focusing on these things because that's
where things would start happening right away," he said.
Pakistan also hoped to attract more U.S. investment, with a
particular focus on IT and pharmaceuticals, after a long lull
during which China became the dominant investor, he said.
"What we don't want is for one country to have an open
field. We want that this should be an open competitive
environment," he said.
Pakistan was well-placed to help diversify U.S. supply
chains that were dependent on China before COVID-19, but have
started to shift toward other regional suppliers. It could serve
as a gateway to Central Asia, Qamar said.
(Reporting by Andrea Shalal; Editing by Sonali Paul)
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