Pakistan, April 10 -- Economic development has never been a uniform process; rather, it reflects disparities in how societies invest in human capital, research, and institutional capacity. For developing economies such as Pakistan, the central challenge is not the absence of educational infrastructure, but the inability to translate academic output into productive, industrial application. This disconnect has contributed to structural inefficiencies, including a persistent reliance on imports and recurring balance-of-payments pressures.
Pakistan's demographic composition presents a significant opportunity. As the fifth most populous country in the world, with approximately 70 percent of its population under the age of 30, the country poss...
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