Supercruise is sustained supersonic flight of an aircraft with a useful cargo, passenger, or weapons load performed efficiently and without the use of afterburners ("reheat").
So if we go by this definition, it seems it has more to do with engine compared to the aircraft design.
By the way, the above picture is of not the current JF-17, rather the old design.
So now plzz see this below picture, which was able to have super cruise capability, rather it is the first aircraft to have super cruise capability way back in the 60s.
English Electric Lightning
The JF-17 is i believe more aerodynamic friendly compared to this 50 era Electric Lightning. So if that aircraft could super cruise, so can JF-17. If JF-17 can go upto Mach 1.8, then its design can sustain and do super cruise capability also.
The main thing for JF-17 to do super cruise capability would be its engine.
JAS-39 Gripen can also do super cruise:
"The new Gripen NG (Next Generation) will have many new parts and will be powered by the General Electric F414G, a development of the F/A-18E/F Super Hornet's engine. The engine will produce 20% more thrust at 98 kN (22,000 lbf), enabling a supercruise speed of Mach 1.1 with air-to-air missiles."
So if we look above, there is nothing to do with the design, rather the new engine with 98kN will give it a super cruise capability with A2A missiles, up to Mach 1.1.
Thus, if JF-17 can get a more powerful engine, which can propel it to Mach 1.0+ with some load of weapons without using its after burner, then JF-17 will have super cruise capability too.
In future with more composites in JF-17, and if it gets a powerful engine in the area of 100kN or more and it has ample power, it can enable JF-17 to do super cruise without using its after burner.
Here is JF-17 and the design seems perfect, all it needs is an engine and more composites to make it lighter.