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Imports of used clothes nearly double in Pakistan as inflation and poverty soar

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KARACHI: Pakistan’s imports of used clothing have nearly doubled this year as more people flock to markets selling secondhand clothes due to rising inflation and poverty, traders and experts said.
During the past fiscal year, imports of secondhand clothes rose by 90 percent to 732,623 metric tons, and were worth $309.56 million, which is a 83.43 percent rise in value as compared to the previous fiscal year, according to data from the Pakistan Bureau of Statistics.
Pakistan imported 186,299 metric tons of pre-worn clothes during the first two months (July-August) of the fiscal year 2021-22, a 283 percent rise compared to the same period last year.
Also in the same period, the country spent $79 million on the import of used clothing items, which is 273.4 percent higher than the previous year.
Inflation stood at 9 percent in September this year.
“The use and the import of secondhand clothes is rising due to high inflationary trends in the country,” Muhammad Usman Farooqui, the general secretary of the Pakistan Secondhand Clothing Merchants Association, told Arab News.
“Those who were not previously using secondhand clothes are now turning toward the used clothing market day by day, with a majority of consumers based in northern parts of the country where extreme weather conditions coupled with poverty are causative factors.”
Pakistani traders import secondhand clothes mainly from the US, Europe, Japan, Australia, China and Korea.

Imported clothes on display in a shop in Karachi. (AN Photo)

Experts say that one of the key reasons for importing secondhand clothing items is poverty. According to the Pakistan Institute of Development Economics, about 39 percent of Pakistanis live in poverty.
“Due to the prevailing poverty, people are left with the choice between clothing and food,” said senior economist Dr. Abdul Jabbar Khan. “Their first choice obviously would be to keep a contact between body and soul.”
Pakistani importers said that imported secondhand articles including blankets, jackets and other casual wear were currently meeting about 30 percent of the clothing requirements of the country’s poor.
“Imported pre-worn clothes meet around 25 percent to 30 percent of the requirement of the poor segment, which cannot afford new clothing,” Farooqui said, pointing to a huge difference in the prices of new and old items.
“Jeans which are available for Rs100 (at flea markets) would be available for around Rs900 in the other markets. The price difference is the major attraction for buyers apart from the quality of imported articles,” Ismail Khan, a flea market vendor in Karachi, told Arab News.
The used clothes business was previously limited to a few areas around the port city’s MA Jinnah Road, but has now expanded to other parts of the megapolis and across the country.
But traders complain of high import costs such as duties, taxes and high freight charges, and have called for a 10 percent waiver in regulatory duty on the import of pre-worn clothes and a reduction in 5 percent general sales tax.
“The cost of imported clothes has increased due to a huge depreciation of the Pakistani rupee,” Farooqui said.
“Besides the freight (charges) from the USA have increased from $2,000 to over $4,000, from Europe from EUR1,800 to EUR2,500, while freight from China has increased from $3,000 per container to $9,000. Commercial importers are in crisis.”

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