Land, industry and the professions
The community remains the backbone of Punjab's agriculture — from the rice belt of Gujranwala and Sialkot to the cotton and wheat of the south. But the last two generations have carried the biradari far beyond the village: into Sialkot's export industries, Faisalabad's textiles, medicine, law, engineering and the civil services. The Jutt trader and industrialist now stands beside the Jutt landowner.
Public life
Jutt families have been prominent in Pakistani public life since before independence — Sir Feroz Khan Noon of the Noons of Sargodha served as Prime Minister of Pakistan, and the Tiwanas of Shahpur led pre-Partition Punjab. Across every province and party, clan names of the biradari — Cheema, Warraich, Gondal, Sial, Tarar, Kharal and more — fill the rolls of parliaments, cabinets and the senior services.
The diaspora
From the 1960s onward, Jutt families joined every wave of Pakistani migration: to Britain's industrial cities, the Gulf states, and later North America, Europe and Australia. Overseas chapters of the biradari today thrive from Houston to Oslo. The diaspora sends home remittances, invests in land and industry, and — as this federation's overseas chapters show — remains bound to tehsil and clan across any distance.