KARACHI: Pakistan’s flour millers urged the government on Saturday to implement a policy allowing the resumption of exports to the United Arab Emirates (UAE) and Africa to regain their lost international market share amid increasing prices of the staple food in the country.
Pakistan has said to be facing a shortage of wheat flour, and the government has taken measures to distribute its bags among the poor who are suffering due to the rising cost of essential items. The situation has reached a critical level, with the country witnessing stampedes at ration distribution centers, causing several deaths in recent months.
According to the flour millers, Pakistan has an excessive quantity of wheat available for local consumption and export to other countries, where Pakistani flour is a cherished commodity.
“Export of flour from Pakistan was abundant until 2013-14, but it gradually declined,” said Hanif Thara, Vice Chairman of the Pakistan Flour Mills Association (PFMA) in the Sindh zone. “Pakistani wheat has a unique taste and cannot be rivaled by wheat produced in any other country. What we need is a government policy and its consistent implementation to export flour.”
Thara said that Pakistani wheat flour had always been in high demand across the world, though India had taken advantage of the situation since his country was no longer supplying the commodity internationally.
“We can again cover the UAE and other Middle Eastern states, the African region, and the United States as well by processing imported wheat,” he continued.
In 2021, Pakistan exported $432,000 worth of wheat flour, making it the 103rd largest exporter of the commodity in the world. The country’s main export destinations included Afghanistan ($224,000), the UAE ($150,000), and the US ($30,000), according to data from the Observatory of Economic Complexity (OEC).
Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif confirmed on Saturday the country had produced 27.5 million tons of wheat during this crop season, which was more than two percent compared to the previous year despite flood damage.
According to the United States Department of Agriculture, Pakistan’s consumption level is expected to be 30.2 million tons based on` an annual growth rate of three percent. The country is expected to meet the shortfall by importing the commodity during the course of the year.
Pakistani millers believe the country is witnessing a rise in flour prices due to administrative reasons.
“There is no shortage of wheat in the country, and the price is mainly increasing due to the administrative measures taken to restrict the movement of wheat within the country,” said Chaudhry Amir Abdullah, PFMA Chairman in Sindh.
Wheat flour prices in Pakistan increased by 175 percent on a year-on-year basis on April 27, as the country recorded 46.82 percent weekly inflation. However, the Provincial Food Minister of Sindh, Mukesh Kumar Chawala, did not respond to a request for comment.