Pakistan fails to meet IMF tax targets despite high revenue collection

A Pakistani pedestrian leaves the entrance of the headquarters of the Federal Board of Revenues (FBR) in Islamabad on November 14, 2012. (AFP)
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Updated 02 March 2020
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Pakistan fails to meet IMF tax targets despite high revenue collection

  • Collected revenue of Rs 2.7 trillion falls Rs. 483 billion short of the target for that time period 
  • If we push for more taxation, economy will deteriorate: FBR spokesman

KARACHI: Pakistan’s tax-collecting agency, the Federal Board of Revenue (FBR) missed its IMF endorsed tax collection targets by a massive Rs. 483 billion for the first eight months of the year, despite collecting considerably higher taxes compared to the previous fiscal year.
According to provisional figures, the FBR has collected Rs. 2.7 trillion or 17 percent higher taxes in the current fiscal year between July to February, as it aims for an ambitious Rs. 5.2 trillion (roughly $36 billion) by the end of the fiscal year-- a figure that seems an impossible target for the struggling country, and one that FBR officials hope will be revised by the IMF.
“The situation is that if we push for more taxation [from the people] at this point, the economy will further deteriorate. We want to collect taxes on the income of people, not on their capital. With low growth, we don’t want to go for the original target of 41 percent taxes,” FBR spokesman, Dr. Hamid Ateeq Sarwar, told Arab News on Sunday and added that there was a huge overall increase in tax collection, with Rs. 320 billion collected in February alone.

For the current fiscal year (FY20), Pakistan had initially targeted a Rs. 5.5 trillion revenue target, which is 41 percent higher than previous years, but this had to be revised down to Rs 5.2 trillion after the first review of the country’s economic performance was made by the IMF. The country’s ambitious tax targets have been set under pressure for an IMF loan agreement.

In 2019, Pakistan was able to stave off a balance of payments crisis and secured a $6 billion bailout package from the IMF, agreeing to stringent loan conditions that focused on increased tax collection, which pushed up inflation to record highs. Since then, the country’s major source of revenue, imports, have sharply declined and economic growth has slowed down.
“If imports pick up around 10 percent, we would be touching the Rs. 5 trillion mark, but if they don’t pick up and the situation remains the same, the tax collection may be around Rs 4.7 or Rs 4.8 trillion,” the FBR spokesman said.
With the IMF having completed its second review of the country’s progress under the loan program, high ranking FBR officials say they hope the tax targets will be slashed once more. The IMF is expected to release its third tranche amount of $450 million next month. 

Pakistan has a long history of setting higher revenue collection targets and then revising them.

“Since 1947, every year a target is fixed then revised downward and that also not achieved,” Abdullah Yousuf, former chairman of the FBR told Arab News. 

Yousuf says big efforts are required to push for enhanced collection. 
“It has to be done in a very, very exceptional manner,” he said.

Meanwhile, the tax-collecting agency has been struck with uncertainty for months in the absence of a permanent chairman, and amid a massive corruption scandal involving high-ranking officials that came to light earlier this year.


Pakistan rules out talks with Afghanistan, says over 330 Afghan fighters killed in clashes

Updated 3 min 19 sec ago
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Pakistan rules out talks with Afghanistan, says over 330 Afghan fighters killed in clashes

  • Clashes between the neighbors erupted after Pakistan’s airstrikes on Afghan territory last weekend
  • US voices support for Pakistan, Information Minister Attaullah Tarar says they aim to make Pakistan safe

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan has ruled out any talks with Afghanistan until an end to “terrorism” emanating from the Afghan soil, officials said on Friday, following the killing of more than 330 Afghan fighters in cross-border clashes this week.

The latest clashes between the neighbors erupted after Pakistan’s airstrikes on Afghan territory last weekend triggered Afghan retaliatory attacks along the border on Thursday, escalating long‑simmering tensions over Pakistan’s claim that Afghanistan shelters Pakistani Taliban militants. Afghanistan denies this and argues Pakistan is deflecting blame for its own security failures.

Pakistani Information Minister Attaullah Tarar said they had killed 331 Afghan fighters, destroyed over 100 posts and targeted 37 military locations across Afghanistan. Afghan officials have said that more than 50 Pakistani soldiers have been killed and several Pakistan posts have been captured by their forces. None of the casualty figures or battlefield claims from either side could be independently verified.

Meanwhile, Mosharraf Zaidi, Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif’s spokesperson for foreign media, ruled out any talks with Afghanistan until Kabul addresses the issue as the United States (US) expressed his support for what it called Pakistan’s “right to defend itself” against attacks from Afghanistan’s Taliban rulers.

“There won’t be any talks, there is nothing to talk about... Terrorism from Afghanistan has to end,” Zaidi told Pakistani state media, saying Islamabad would continue to target militant havens inside Afghanistan.

“Pakistan’s responsibility is to protect its citizens. If we know that there is a terrorist in point A and we know that there is a terrorist enabler at point A, we will find a weapon to land at point A and eliminate the threat.”

Zaidi said he didn’t expect Pakistan to deviate from this position and that the government had clearly conveyed what it was doing.

“We have clearly articulated what we are doing and what we plan on continuing to do and what it will take for us to stop doing what we are doing,” Zaidi said.

“And we will expect that both the international community and the regime in question, the Afghan Taliban, will come to their senses and will help reduce instability and disorder in this region.”

Pakistan is a major non-NATO ally of Washington, while the US considers the Afghan Taliban to be a “terrorist” group.

“The United States supports Pakistan’s right to defend itself against attacks from the Taliban, a Specially Designated Global Terrorist group,” Reuters quoted a State Department spokesperson as saying. US diplomat Allison Hooker said on X she spoke on Friday with Pakistan Foreign Secretary Amna Baloch.

The State Department spokesperson said Washington was aware of the escalation in tensions and “outbreak of fighting between Pakistan and the Afghan Taliban,” adding the US was “saddened by the loss of life.”

“The Taliban have consistently failed to uphold their counterterrorism commitments,” the State Department said, adding that “terrorist groups use Afghanistan as a launching pad for their heinous attacks.”

Meanwhile, Afghan Taliban spokesperson Zabihullah Mujahid called for talks to resolve the crisis.

“We have always emphasized peaceful resolution, and now too we want the issue to be resolved through dialogue,” he said on Friday afternoon.

Asked what Pakistan desired, Information Minister Tarar said: “Neutralizing the threat and ensuring that Pakistan is safe.”

“Because for us, we’ve been good neighbors, we’ve been very friendly neighbors, we’ve been very, very generous neighbors. Our generosity, unfortunately, has often been seen as our weakness,” he told state media.

“So the objective, aim is to neutralize the threat and make Pakistan safe.”

To a question about a ceasefire, Tarar said it was “too early” to comment on that as it was an evolving situation.