Pakistan has been ranked 101 out of 158 countries in the 2025 Illicit Trade Index, raising serious concerns about its economic environment and ability to attract investment, according to a report by The News International.
The country's struggle with illegal trade is resulting in an alarming annual revenue loss of Rs 751 billion, with the tobacco sector alone accounting for Rs 300 billion of this deficit.
These findings were presented in a new report titled "Pakistan's Battle Against Illicit Trade: An Analysis of Challenges and Pathways to Resilience," released jointly by the Policy Research Institute of Market Economy (PRIME) and the Transnational Alliance to Combat Illicit Trade (TRACIT) on Thursday.
The report highlights five key sectors driving these losses: Tobacco (Rs 300 billion), petroleum products like petrol and diesel (Rs 270 billion), tires and lubricants (Rs 106 billion), pharmaceuticals (Rs 60-65 billion), and tea (Rs 10 billion).
Pakistan scored 44.5 on the Illicit Trade Index, falling below the global average of 49.9.
Pakistan's performance across six dimensions of the Index can be gauged by the highest score observed in Trade, Customs and Borders (75.4), indicating relatively strong border controls and customs management mechanisms. However, Supply Chain Intermediaries (25.9) and Sectoral Illicit Trade Indicators (29.3) score notably low, pointing to serious vulnerabilities in internal trade networks and sector-specific compliance. Moreover, moderate scores in Taxation and Economic Environment (47.3), Regulatory Framework and Enforcement (46.4) and Criminal Enablers of Illicit Trade (42.7) suggest systemic weaknesses in policy implementation and enforcement capacity, The News International reported.
Overall, the findings suggest that while Pakistan is making some progress at the borders, much deeper reforms are needed within the country's internal trade, regulatory, and enforcement systems to curb illicit trade and support sustainable economic development.
The country's struggle with illegal trade is resulting in an alarming annual revenue loss of Rs 751 billion, with the tobacco sector alone accounting for Rs 300 billion of this deficit.
These findings were presented in a new report titled "Pakistan's Battle Against Illicit Trade: An Analysis of Challenges and Pathways to Resilience," released jointly by the Policy Research Institute of Market Economy (PRIME) and the Transnational Alliance to Combat Illicit Trade (TRACIT) on Thursday.
The report highlights five key sectors driving these losses: Tobacco (Rs 300 billion), petroleum products like petrol and diesel (Rs 270 billion), tires and lubricants (Rs 106 billion), pharmaceuticals (Rs 60-65 billion), and tea (Rs 10 billion).
Pakistan scored 44.5 on the Illicit Trade Index, falling below the global average of 49.9.
Pakistan's performance across six dimensions of the Index can be gauged by the highest score observed in Trade, Customs and Borders (75.4), indicating relatively strong border controls and customs management mechanisms. However, Supply Chain Intermediaries (25.9) and Sectoral Illicit Trade Indicators (29.3) score notably low, pointing to serious vulnerabilities in internal trade networks and sector-specific compliance. Moreover, moderate scores in Taxation and Economic Environment (47.3), Regulatory Framework and Enforcement (46.4) and Criminal Enablers of Illicit Trade (42.7) suggest systemic weaknesses in policy implementation and enforcement capacity, The News International reported.
Overall, the findings suggest that while Pakistan is making some progress at the borders, much deeper reforms are needed within the country's internal trade, regulatory, and enforcement systems to curb illicit trade and support sustainable economic development.
You may also like
SC urges law minister to make changes in arbitration bill yet to be taken up by Parliament
Royal Family's major issue with Prince Harry that threatens reconciliation - expert
Pinarayi, Tharoor at Adani event will give many sleepless nights, says PM Modi
F1 driver gets sack verdict from team boss as replacement waiting in the wings
Lamine Yamal sent brutal Bukayo Saka verdict after unexpected eight-word Arsenal admission