A sharp realignment in South Asia’s trade corridors is underway after Pakistan sealed key border crossings with Afghanistan, while India moved swiftly to open a high-value pharmaceutical supply pathway to Kabul, reshaping regional commerce amid rising geopolitical and economic frictions.
Pakistan’s decision to restrict cross-border movement with Afghanistan has disrupted traditional supply chains, particularly for essential goods such as medicines, food items and consumer products that have historically moved overland via Pakistani routes. The closure has intensified shortages in Afghanistan and forced importers to seek alternative sourcing and logistics channels.
India steps in with pharma supplies
Against this backdrop, India has expanded direct pharmaceutical exports to Afghanistan, creating a pathway estimated to be worth several billion rupees annually. Indian drug manufacturers, already among Afghanistan’s largest medicine suppliers, are scaling up shipments of essential formulations, chronic-care drugs and life-saving medicines.
The supplies are being routed through air cargo and alternative regional corridors, reducing dependence on Pakistan-controlled land routes. Trade officials say the move not only ensures continuity of healthcare supplies to Afghanistan but also strengthens India’s footprint in a strategically important market.
Strategic and commercial implications
Industry analysts note that the shift underscores India’s growing role as a reliable supplier of affordable medicines in conflict-affected and politically sensitive regions. For Indian pharma exporters, the Afghan corridor offers stable demand and long-term market presence, even as traditional routes face disruption.
At the same time, Pakistan’s border closure risks pushing Afghan trade further away from Pakistani ports and logistics providers, potentially eroding Islamabad’s role as Afghanistan’s primary transit hub.
A changing regional trade map
The developments highlight how geopolitical decisions are rapidly redrawing South Asia’s trade architecture, with air and multimodal corridors gaining prominence over traditional land routes. As uncertainty persists along established borders, exporters and governments alike are re-engineering supply chains to prioritise resilience, speed and political reliability.
India’s pharma push into Kabul, industry observers say, is likely to become a template for future trade engagement, combining humanitarian supply with strategic economic outreach in a region where access and trust increasingly matter as much as geography.
