During his recent visit to the US to attend the United Nations General Assembly session to draw the world attention towards the long drawn lockdown of the Muslim majority Kashmir valley in the Indian occupied Jammu and Kashmir state and the genocide being committed there by the Indian security forces on the orders of the Facist Modi Government, Prime Minister Imran Khan did not forget to strive for improving Pakistan’s economy. He ensured to take the time out, of his back to back hectic diplomatic schedule, for his meetings with the international investors. In this regard, Imran Khan, along with his economic team worked hard and held meetings with the USA’s global financial leaders, bankers and investors to convince them to invest in Pakistan. These meetings were part of the Prime Minister’s efforts to muster foreign investment in enhancing economic growth through additional energy production, industrialization, and modernization of agriculture, to create employment opportunities and boost exports and the foreign exchange reserves in the country to pay back foreign loans and put the economy on the right track so that it can make a speedy and sustainable progress. In this context, according to the Customs, (world’s first indepth newspaper on customs) dated 4 October 2019, during their meetings with the world’s financial leaders, bankers and investors in the US, the Prime Minister Imran Khan and his delegation, including Advisor on Finance Dr. Abdul Hafeez Shaikh, Advisor to PM on Commerce Mr. Razak Dawood and Governor State Bank of Pakistan Dr. Reza Baqir shared with them the economic vision and reforms undertaken by the government. They also discussed the business incentives and future proposals for investment in Pakistan. Particular sectors that were highlighted, related to telecom, investment, equity, market, banking, IT industry, energy and tourism, etc. The PM also invited the delegates to visit Pakistan for a Global Business Leaders conference that is being planned later this year. Some of the global financial leaders that met with the Pakistani visiting delegation included Jamie Dimon, the Chairman and CEO of JP Morgan, the largest investment Bank in US. His name was included, in Time Magazine’s 2006, 2008, 2009 and 2011 lists of the world’s 100 most influential people. The Prime Minister also met Laurence Douglas Fink, the Chairman and CEO of Black Rock, and American Multinational Investment Management Corporation. Black Rock is the largest money-management firm in the world with more than $6.5 trillion in assets under management. The PM also met Stephen A. Schwarzman, the chairman and CEO of the Blackstone Group, a leading global private equity firm in the world. He was Chairman of President Donald Trump’s Strategic and Policy Forum The PM also met Stephen A. Schwarzman, the chairman and CEO of the Blackstone Group, a leading global private equity firm in the world. He was Chairman of President Donald Trump’s Strategic and Policy Forum. The Prime Minister Imran Khan also held a meeting with Brian Moynihan, Chairman and CEO of Bank of America, which is one of the largest banking institutions in the United States.The PM also held a meeting with Robert Rubin, Secretary of the Treasury in the Clinton Administration, and a former Co-Chairman of Goldman Sachs. Mr. Rubin is the founder of the Hamilton Project that advises the government. He is also the Co-chairman emeritus of the US Council on Foreign Relations. The PM and Advisor to the PM on Finance Dr. Abdul Hafeez Shaikh also met with senior executives of Exxon Mobil, Telenor, Uber, Citigroup, and others during their visit to the US. The Exxon Mobil, the world’s biggest Oil &Gas Company has already announced that it will reinvest in Pakistani market after a gap of nearly three decades. The PM met the AKD group’s board members also; a security company which is owned by a Pakistani American. During his visit to the US, along with his heavy diplomatic activities regarding the Kashmir dispute, the PM’s tireless struggle for attracting foreign investment indicates his dedication for restructuring the Pakistan’s economy by pulling it out of the current difficult situation. In view of the above mentioned meetings held by the PM and his economic team with the US business tycoons, it is hoped that the US investors will avail the opportunity of investing in Pakistan without much hesitation since they were briefed on the economic incentives which were being created in Pakistan by making business friendly rules and regulations. If this happens, it will be a win win enterprise for both the countries, as while the US investment will contribute in developing Pakistan’s economy in a major way by enhancing growth and employment opportunities, their investment will also fetch major profits to the US investors. [The writer is a former Research Fellow of Islamabad Policy Research Institute (IPRI), Islamabad and Senior Research Fellow, Strategic Vision Institute, Islamabad]