Business
Vietnam, Pakistan set to launch PTA talks | The Express Tribune
LAHORE:
Vietnam is ready to begin negotiations on a Preferential Trade Agreement (PTA) with Pakistan to deepen economic cooperation and expand bilateral trade, Ambassador of Vietnam to Pakistan Pham Anh Tuan said on Saturday.
Speaking at the Lahore Chamber of Commerce and Industry (LCCI), Tuan said both countries had agreed at the 5th Joint Trade Committee meeting in Hanoi in July 2025 to launch PTA talks this year. He noted that bilateral trade reached $850 million in 2024 and was expected to cross $1 billion in 2025.
LCCI President Mian Abuzar Shad said Pakistan and Vietnam were established trading partners but had yet to achieve full potential. He cited State Bank data showing Pakistan’s exports to Vietnam dropped from $357 million in 2023-24 to $227 million in 2024-25, while imports rose from $285 million to $374 million.
He said both countries should aim to push trade to $5 billion by improving market access. Shad highlighted Vietnam’s remarkable trade performance, noting its global exports touched $520 billion in 2024, while imports stood at $382 billion.
Pakistan mainly exports corn, cotton fabrics, leather and yarn, while Vietnam exports electronics, synthetic yarn, natural rubber and tea. Shad urged diversification into seafood, processed meat, pharmaceuticals, fruits and vegetables, while also exploring IT and tourism.
LCCI Senior Vice President Khalid Usman said Vietnam’s ASEAN membership gave it strategic importance and suggested both sides also consider a Free Trade Agreement in the future.
Business
India offers limited access to agri goods; protects staples, dairy – The Times of India
NEW DELHI: Ending months of uncertainty, India and US announced the finalisation of the first tranche of the trade deal early Saturday that will see Washington lower “reciprocal tariffs” on Indian exports to 18% over the next few days and New Delhi slash levies on several American imports.The India-US joint statement came with US President Donald Trump scrapping the 25% penalty on Indian exports for Russian oil purchases, a move that overnight makes made-in-India products, including those in the high seas, competitive in the American market. Labour-intensive sectors with significant MSME presence, textiles, leather and footwear and marine products, are expected to be big beneficiaries as they were facing strong headwinds due to the punishing 50% additional tariffs, which will now drop to 18% over the product-specific or MFN tariff that applies to all countries.Commerce and industry minister Piyush Goyal told reporters that India has opted for calibrated opening up, allowing American imports in areas where there were requirements, while protecting sensitivities in key segments such as agricultural and dairy products, including cereals, corn, sugar, soybean, genetically modified (GM) food products and fuel ethanol.While sensitive farm goods were the sticking point, India has sought to work out an arrangement where products such as apples and cotton long staple fibre will enter India at lower duty, but in specified quantities. Import duties will be slashed for pistachios, walnuts, almonds, soybean oil and some lentils, wines and whiskey as well as dried distillers’ grains and red sorghum for animal feed. In return, several Indian foods products, including bananas, guava, spices, tea, coffee and processed food items, will also get zero-duty access in US.
Business
After year of turmoil, Indian diamonds and gems set to shine in US markets – The Times of India
MUMBAI: Zero-duty access for diamonds and coloured gemstones to the US under the interim trade agreement framework will benefit the gems and jewellery sector, which was termed by industry leaders as a “critical inflection point” after bruising year for exports.The move could help reverse the sharp decline in shipments to India’s largest market, where cut and polished diamond exports fell by over 60% – from $3.64 billion to $1.45 billion – amid tariff-induced loss of competitiveness, they said.Kirit Bhansali, chairman of Gem and Jewellery Export Promotion Council, said, “Last year has been particularly difficult for the sector, and this step restores a level playing field for Indian exporters.”India and the US announced on Saturday that they had reached a framework for an interim trade agreement under which both sides will reduce import duties on a range of goods to boost bilateral trade.“This is a big breakthrough and will lead to more jobs. The tariff rollback will help revive exports and bring back confidence in the market,” said Ashok Gajera, MD Laxmi Diamonds.Under the framework, duties on jewellery have been brought down to 18%, offering what the industry described as immediate, if partial, relief. GJEPC has also urged govt to include lab-grown diamonds and synthetic gemstones in the exemption list, which currently stands at 18%.All India Gem and Jewellery Domestic Council (GJC) chairman, Rajesh Rode, said zero-duty access would give Indian exporters unprecedented entry into the US market. “This strengthens global competitiveness, improves margins, and ensures that artisans’ creations reach international consumers at fair prices.” GJC’s vice-chairman Avinash Gupta described the move as a game-changer for small and medium enterprises that form the backbone of the sector.
Business
Software Engineering To Be Obsolete In A Year? Anthropic CEO Warns, Vembu Says Pay Attention
Last Updated:
Dario Amodei of Anthropic warns at Davos that AI could make software engineering obsolete within a year, a view supported by Sridhar Vembu of Zoho.

Dario Amodei of Anthropic warns at Davos that AI could make software engineering obsolete within a year, a view supported by Sridhar Vembu of Zoho. (Pic: Wikipedia)
Software engineering may be the profession feeling the sharpest impact of artificial intelligence, with core tasks such as coding increasingly being handled by AI systems. Tech giants like Google, Amazon and Microsoft are already using AI to generate portions of new codebases—a trend expected to accelerate.
Against this backdrop, Dario Amodei, chief executive of Anthropic, has issued a stark warning: software engineering as a profession could effectively become obsolete within the next 12 months. While the claim has sparked debate, it has also drawn support from industry leaders, including Sridhar Vembu, founder of Zoho, who says the warning deserves serious attention.
Amodei made the remarks last month at the World Economic Forum annual meeting in Davos, where he spoke about how rapidly AI is reshaping jobs, productivity and the global economy. He argued that the impact of AI on employment is no longer theoretical, particularly in software development.
The comments went viral online, drawing both agreement and scepticism. Responding to a clip of Amodei’s remarks shared on X, Vembu urged people not to dismiss the warning. “We better pay attention to him because he has the best coding tool in the world,” Vembu wrote, noting that the message carries weight because it comes from the head of a company building some of the most advanced AI coding tools.
Explaining his concern, Amodei said AI is rapidly shifting from being a productivity aid to becoming the primary executor of work. Software development, he noted, is among the clearest examples of this transition. At Anthropic itself, engineers increasingly rely on AI models to generate code, stepping in mainly to review and refine outputs.
“I have engineering leads who have basically said to me, ‘I don’t write any code anymore. I just let Opus do the work and I edit it,’” Amodei said.
While his warning focused on coders, Amodei cautioned that the implications extend far beyond software teams. He said AI could drive significant job losses across industries as models grow more capable at an accelerating pace.
“We basically have a Moore’s Law for intelligence, where the model is getting more and more cognitively capable every few months,” he said, arguing that as AI takes on increasingly complex tasks, the need for large teams of human programmers could shrink dramatically—potentially eliminating job categories that took decades to build.
February 07, 2026, 21:35 IST
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