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Good news for freelancers as PayPal enters Pakistani market through strategic partnership - Pakistan Observer

pakobserver.net 06-01-2024 11:40 1 Minutes reading
ISLAMABAD - Pakistani government remains in talks with PayPal to start operations, and the prolonged talks turn out beneficial as the online payment giant finally enters Asian country through a strategic partnership with an existing international payment gateway. The move will help freelancers to get payments smoothly, as the platform supports multiple currencies, allowing people to receive payments in their preferred currency. The interim IT and telecom minister Umar Saif announced the breakthrough, saying PayPal is not coming to the country and an agreement has been reached under which the remittances would be channelised from Paypal via a third party. Dr Umar revealed that the official launch event is set for January 11, as the interim government plans to introduce new initiatives. This includes offering smartphones through easy installment plans and conducting standardized quality tests for IT graduates in the coming week. For quite some time, freelancers remain in advocating for the introduction of online payment systems. The previous government also made attempts, but they didn't materialize. Paypal earlier hesitated to come to Pakistan, citing a lack of business opportunities. It was learnt that Kakar-led government is making efforts, collaborating with the SIFC and the State Bank, to implement a significant policy change. This allowed IT companies to retain 50% of their export revenue in dollars in a local account, enabling them to cover international expenses without restrictions. This move encouraged IT companies to repatriate their dollars.

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Your common courtyard..! - Pakistan Observer
13.01.24 09:43
by pakobserver.net

Your common courtyard..! - Pakistan Observer

PARK your taxi to the side of the road! I told the taxi driver gently as he got out of his cab to go to the local temple. "Are you the police?" he asked me. "No!" I said. "Then mind your own business!" I knew where he lived and that evening I went over to his place. He opened the door, stared at me, then said, "You have come to harass me again?" "No," I said, "I have come to visit you! May I come in?" "Okay," he said uncertainly and ushered me into his home, a small tenement measuring just around two hundred square feet. There was a TV in one corner and a huge double bed at the other where all his family were perched watching the evening program. "You keep your home very neat!" I said pleasantly. "We have to," he said, "Otherwise we will be falling over everything which is out of place, so I have trained the children that if they take out anything they put it back where it belongs!" "Excellent!" I said, then looked at the children, "You have a good father who has taught you well," then saw a look of puzzlement on the taxi driver's face, "You are saying something," he said. "I have not said anything," I told him as his face broke into a big grin. "What are you smiling at?" I asked. "I understand," he said, "Why you have come here!" "You do?" I asked. "You are telling me that if I am so neat in my house I should also be neat outside isn't it?" "Is that the message you are getting?" I asked innocently. "But this morning you told me to mind my own business if I was not the police. There is a Chinese saying," I continued, "that a common courtyard is swept by none, and yet I wonder why? Why shouldn't we who are so clean and neat in our own homes not treat the outside roads and open places as an extension of our homes? Why?" The taxi driver pondered over my statement, then said, "Maybe what you've just asked has the answer, that if we thought of the whole country as our own home, we would treat it as such, I think that is what I am going to teach my children from now on!" I walked my dog the next day and found the taxi driver rushing to the temple, he grinned as he reached the entrance and pointed to his cab, it was parked alongside the curb, and the traffic around flowed smoothly even as he was inside worshipping. The common courtyard was no more common, he had made it his own, what about you?

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