Arab News
Arab news,
Tue, Oct 07, 2025 | Rabi al-Thani 15, 1447
Pakistan plans to double manpower exports to Saudi Arabia
Saudi Arabia:
Pakistan is planning to double its manpower
exports to Saudi Arabia after the signing of a landmark defense deal between the
two countries last month, officials told Arab News on Monday.
The country’s human resource exports to Saudi
Arabia have already witnessed a steady rise over the past five years, according
to the Bureau of Emigration & Overseas Employment. Pakistan sent 1.88 million
workers to Saudi Arabia between 2020 and 2024, up 21 percent from 1.56 million
in 2015–2019.
Remittances from the Kingdom rose from $7.39
billion in 2020 to $8.59 billion in 2024, reflecting steady demand for Pakistani
labor. In contrast, inflows from the United Arab Emirates fluctuated between
$5.8 billion and $6.8 billion during the same period, while those from Qatar
remained below $1 billion annually, according to the State Bank of Pakistan.
In September, both countries signed a landmark
defense pact that is meant to enhance joint deterrence and deepen decades of
military and security cooperation. Top Pakistani government officials, including
National Food Security Minister Rana Tanveer, have said Islamabad and Riyadh
will sign a wide-ranging economic pact in the follow up of the defense deal.
“The Saudi-Pakistan defense pact will have a great
impact on manpower export. Current average export is around half a million
workers per year, and from next year, we hope to double it to one million,” said
Gul Akbar, a senior director at the BEOE.
The BEOE is working with officials of Pakistan’s
Special Investment Facilitation Council, a civil-military body formed to boost
investment, particularly from the Middle East, to make it possible through a
number of steps, according to the official. The draft will be shared with Saudi
officials by their Pakistani counterparts in upcoming meetings.
The Pakistan government on Sunday constituted a
high-level committee comprising ministers and officials to oversee bilateral
economic engagements and negotiations with Saudi Arabia.
Akbar said Pakistan has proposed setting up
technical training institutes in both countries to improve skill certification
and employability of local workforce.
“We are also proposing an e-visa system for
Pakistani workers,” he added.
The Kingdom remains the largest destination for
Pakistani workers and the biggest source of remittances that amounted to $736.7
million in Aug. out of a total inflow of $3.1 billion, according to the SBP.
Experts link the rise in number of Pakistani
workers traveling to Saudi Arabia to ongoing development projects in the Kingdom
under its Vision 2030, which they say have created strong demand for skilled and
semi-skilled foreign labor.
Saudi Arabia’s hosting of the 2034 FIFA World Cup
is further fueling demand for foreign labor, amid construction of large
stadiums, transport networks and hospitality infrastructure in the Kingdom.
Meanwhile, Pakistan’s human resource exports to
the UAE declined sharply by 65 percent from 1.32 million to 463,000 from 2020
till 2024, while Qatar more than doubled its intake from 74,000 to 170,000
Pakistani workers, reflecting shifting labor dynamics across the Gulf region.
To meet Saudi Arabia’s labor needs, Pakistan has
partnered with Takamol, a Pakistani skill verification program, and its National
Vocational and Technical Training Commission is certifying workers in 62 skilled
categories, ranging from construction to technical services.
Speaking to Arab News, Masood Ahmad, CEO of M.Pak
Makkah Manpower Services, said his firm alone dispatched 2,000 workers to Saudi
Arabia this year.
“The defense pact has boosted Saudi employers’
confidence in Pakistani workers as both countries deepen cooperation,” he said,
highlighting a growing demand for health care professionals and delivery
drivers.
Akbar dismissed concerns about “brain
drain” and called overseas employment a “national achievement.” Pakistan’s
surplus labor should be seen as an economic resource that brings home
remittances, knowledge and technical skills, he added.
Remittances remain a cornerstone of Pakistan’s
external finances, providing hard currency that supports household consumption,
narrows the current-account deficit, and strengthens foreign exchange reserves.
In the last fiscal year, Pakistan recorded $38.3
billion workers’ remittances — an $8 billion increase from the previous year,
surpassing the country’s $7 billion International Monetary Fund loan program.