Pakistan, Malaysia announce $200 million halal meat trade quota, closer cooperation in tech, education

Pakistan's Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif, left, and Malaysia's Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim shake hands as they hold a news conference during Sharif's visit in Putrajaya, Malaysia, on October 6, 2025. (AP)
Short Url
Updated 06 October 2025
Follow

Pakistan, Malaysia announce $200 million halal meat trade quota, closer cooperation in tech, education

  • PMs agree to boost collaboration in digital economy, agriculture and higher education 
  • Talks also cover Gaza ceasefire efforts and growing cultural exchange between the nations

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan and Malaysia on Monday announced a new $200 million halal meat trade quota and pledged to deepen cooperation in the digital economy, agriculture and education as part of a renewed effort to expand economic and strategic ties between the two Muslim nations.

The announcement came during Pakistani Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif’s three-day visit to Malaysia, where he held wide-ranging talks with Malaysian Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim.

Addressing a joint press conference with Sharif, Ibrahim said Kuala Lumpur had already increased rice imports from Pakistan and was now prepared to facilitate beef and meat imports under a new halal trade framework.

Anwar added that the decision followed discussions with Sharif, who had proposed expanding agricultural exports to Malaysia, including up to $200 million worth of meat. He said both governments had also agreed to explore new areas of collaboration in science, technology, engineering, mathematics (STEM), innovation, digital industries, and semiconductors, noting Pakistan’s strong early performance in these sectors among Muslim nations and Malaysia’s readiness to build on that potential.

“This quota of exporting meat to Malaysia will be regulated by market price mechanisms and all halal certification required by Malaysian authorities,” Sharif assured Ibrahim as he addressed the joint press conference in Putrajaya. 

“We will make all possible efforts to meet your conditionalities so that this cooperation expands further in the years ahead.”




Pakistan's Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif inspects the honour guard as he arrives before a meeting with Malaysia's Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim (not pictured) in Putrajaya on October 6, 2025. (AFP)

Ibrahim said Malaysia welcomed Pakistan’s growing role in halal production and would facilitate increased imports of beef and meat products. 

“There is an interest to export beef, meat, into Malaysia. We will facilitate this, of course,” he said.

Beyond agricultural trade, both leaders discussed expanding partnerships in AI, digital innovation, and vocational and technical training, with Sharif calling for joint ventures that combine Malaysian expertise and Pakistani talent. 

The two sides also reaffirmed commitments under the Malaysia-Pakistan Closer Economic Partnership Agreement (MPCEPA), which provides preferential access for goods and services.

On global and regional issues, Ibrahim praised Pakistan’s stance on counterterrorism and its support for peace in South Asia, while both leaders backed US President Donald Trump-led efforts for a ceasefire and humanitarian access in Gaza.

Cultural diplomacy also featured in the visit, with Sharif launching the Urdu translation of Ibrahim’s book “SCRIPT,” calling it a bridge between Islamabad and Kuala Lumpur.

Sharif, on his first official visit to Malaysia as prime minister, said Pakistan aimed to learn from Malaysia’s advances in technology, skills development and economic management. 

Bilateral trade between Pakistan and Malaysia currently stands at around $1.4 billion annually, according to official data from both governments. Pakistan exported goods worth about $515 million to Malaysia in 2024, while imports from Malaysia were valued at nearly $960 million, leaving Islamabad with a trade deficit of roughly $445 million, according to the State Bank of Pakistan and the Malaysian external trade statistics.

Malaysia’s exports to Pakistan are dominated by palm oil and other vegetable fats, as well as machinery, rubber products, and organic chemicals, while Pakistan’s main exports to Malaysia include rice, textiles, seafood, and minerals. Officials say there is growing interest in diversifying the trade basket beyond commodities toward IT services, halal certification and higher-value manufactured goods.

The two countries have traded under the Malaysia-Pakistan Closer Economic Partnership Agreement (MPCEPA) since 2008, which provides preferential market access for goods and services. 

In October 2024, they signed four new memorandums of understanding to boost cooperation in trade, investment, and industrial collaboration, and later agreed to renegotiate and modernize their bilateral free trade framework to reflect emerging opportunities in digital and sustainable sectors.


Pakistan, UK discuss tax reform and digital governance under stabilization agenda

Updated 6 sec ago
Follow

Pakistan, UK discuss tax reform and digital governance under stabilization agenda

  • Pakistan outlines tax expansion, energy reform and SOE restructuring under IMF-linked program
  • UK signals readiness to support governance, digitalization, investment climate improvements

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan and the United Kingdom reaffirmed cooperation on economic reform and digital governance on Tuesday, with Finance Minister Muhammad Aurangzeb telling UK Minister for Development Baroness Chapman that stabilization efforts were now centered on tax expansion, debt control and restructuring state-owned enterprises.

Pakistan is working to widen its tax base, reduce leakages through digital systems and overhaul energy-sector losses as part of ongoing fiscal reform. The government is also pursuing privatization and pension restructuring to create fiscal space for social spending in a period of high external financing needs.

Aurangzeb “highlighted ongoing work on energy sector efficiencies, debt management, public-sector right-sizing, pension reform, and measures aimed at restoring fiscal sustainability and creating space for social sector priorities,” according to an official readout of the meeting released by the finance ministry. 

Chapman said the UK stood ready to support reform delivery through technical assistance, regulatory cooperation and digital transition tools aimed at simplifying compliance and improving transparency, the statement added. 

Chapman “reaffirmed the United Kingdom’s readiness to provide technical assistance, regulatory support, and capacity-building … particularly in digitalization, governance reforms, investment climate improvement, and ease of doing business.”

Talks also covered demographic pressures, provincial governance, climate resilience and women’s economic participation, areas both sides said needed coordinated financing and policy planning. The ministers further discussed aligning development spending with World Bank-supported programs and encouraging private-sector participation in reforms.