
Tube well Use in Punjab: Tragedy of the commons?
January 27, 2026


Chinese investment in Pakistan is far more diverse than the typical CPEC narrative suggests.
When we think of China’s economic footprint in Pakistan, the mind immediately jumps to mega infrastructure projects, motorways, energy plants, and Gwadar. But a look at the actual corporate registrations tells a very different — and much more interesting — story.
Using a database of 2,000+ registered Chinese firms, the picture that emerges is of hundreds of small and medium Chinese businesses quietly setting up across Pakistan:
🔹 trading houses
🔹 solar and machinery suppliers
🔹 small manufacturers
🔹 engineering workshops
🔹 consultancies
🔹 IT support firms
🔹 import–export outfits
🔹 mining exploration units
This is not the state-to-state, large-loan model often associated with Western investment.
It is entrepreneur-led, fragmented, market-seeking, and highly adaptive.
Almost 49% of Chinese firms are registered in Islamabad — reflecting proximity to regulators and CPEC project management.
But the sector spread tells the bigger story:
Trading & import–export account for 28% of all companies
Construction and engineering are strong, but not overwhelming
Energy firms are present but not dominant
Mining, IT, ceramics, services, and niche industrial units fill the long tail
In other words:
Chinese presence in Pakistan is no longer just about highways and hydropower.
It now includes small businesses, risk-taking entrepreneurs, and private investment — similar to what we see in Southeast Asia and Africa.
This distinguishes it sharply from Western investment, which is typically routed through large multinationals, development finance institutions, or corporate partnerships.
This new wave of Chinese activity — small firms, family-run businesses, mid-sized manufacturers — has long-term implications for employment, supply chains, and Pakistan’s business culture.