Fear of tax authorities increases demand for cash in Pakistan

Pakistanis wait in line to withdraw money from an automated teller machine (ATM) during a public holiday in Rawalpindi on March 2, 2014. (AFP)
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Updated 05 March 2020
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Fear of tax authorities increases demand for cash in Pakistan

  • Financial experts say traders are withdrawing money from banks and using promissory notes while making transactions
  • The country’s central bank believes digitization of economy will help create a potential market of $36 billion by 2025

KARACHI: Pakistan’s migration from cash transactions to digital payments remains elusive owing to the fear of the taxman, said the governor of the country’s central bank on Tuesday, adding that people did not want to come into the tax net.
“People are withdrawing money from banks and they do not want to come into the tax net,” Dr. Reza Baqir, Governor State Bank of Pakistan (SPB), told parliamentarians while attending a meeting of the Public Accounts Committee (PAC), local media reported.
The central bank governor has been striving to reduce people’s dependence on cash transactions since he believes it will reduce the cost of printing money and documentation.
In November last year, an agreement was signed between the country’s tax department and financial institutions to help keep an eye on the undocumented money flowing through banking channels. The agreement bounds the commercial banks operating in the country to share details of their account holders, transactions, withdrawals, deposits and payments through debit and credit cards with the tax agency.
Bankers say the market feedback shows that people have started withdrawing money and are now relying on cash to make transactions.
The increase in the demand of cash has led to the surge of currency circulation in the country’s economy which, according to the SBP data, has increased from Rs4.3 trillion in June 2018 to Rs5.4 trillion in February 2020.
“There is a general fear of tax authorities among people, and many of them have withdrawn money from banks. It also saves them from a number of taxes including on cash transactions done through the banks,” Ahmed Ali Siddiqui, senior banker and Director of the Center for Excellence in Islamic Finance (CEIF) at the Institute of Business Administration (IBA), told Arab News on Wednesday.
“It is like an incentive for people not to deal with banks,” he continued, “and this has developed informal banking channels in some markets where simple promissory notes are circulating for day to day business transactions. It is good that the central bank has understood the reality.”
However, another banker said that it was still not an alarming situation, though it was true that people were preferring cash-based transactions. “The corporates prefer digital transactions but individuals and small businesses prefer cash,” Zubair Shaikh, Convener of the Central Committee of the Federation of Pakistan Chambers of Commerce and Industry (FPCCI) on Islamic Banking, said.
Despite the growing number of Internet and mobile phone users, cash continues to dominate the Pakistani economy with minimal use of electronic payments, regardless of the value of transaction, especially by micro and small retailers.
According to the Pakistan Telecommunications Authority (PTA), the number of cellphone users has increased to 164 million out of which 74 million have subscribed to 3 or 4G services and 76 million are broadband subscribers.
Keeping in view the fast digital transformation, the central bank has launched a digital payment strategy that envisages a migration to efficient electronic payments to stimulate consumption and enhance trade to bring benefits to the country’s whole economy.
By migrating to electronic means, the strategy intends to boost Pakistan’s GDP by seven percent, create four million jobs, generate $263 billion of new deposits and create a potential market of $36 billion by 2025, according to the SBP.
Financial experts warn, however, that this can only be done once people develop faith in the country’s tax authorities.


Imran Khan’s party warns government against shifting him to hospital without informing family, physicians

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Imran Khan’s party warns government against shifting him to hospital without informing family, physicians

  • Pakistan’s government said on Saturday it would shift Khan to a hospital, form medical board for eye treatment amid outcry over health concerns
  • Commencing any medical examination or treatment of Khan in absence of family, physicians will be in violation of constitution, jail rules, says party

ISLAMABAD: Former prime minister Imran Khan’s Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) party this week warned the government against shifting him to a hospital for treatment without informing his family and physicians, saying such a move would be in violation of the constitution and jail rules. 

The PTI’s response came after the government announced on Saturday that it has decided to transfer the jailed former prime minister from the Central Prison in Rawalpindi to a hospital and form a medical board for his eye treatment. 

The developments follow a report submitted to the Supreme Court by a lawyer appointed as a “friend of the court” who was asked to visit Khan at Rawalpindi’s Adiala jail earlier this month. The report said the 73-year-old had suffered severe vision loss in his right eye due to central retinal vein occlusion, leaving him with only 15 percent sight in the affected eye.

The report’s findings triggered a sit-in by an opposition alliance, including members of Khan’s PTI, outside Parliament House in Islamabad, who demanded his immediate transfer to Islamabad’s Al-Shifa Hospital. Khan was also allowed to speak to his sons for about 20 minutes, according to his family, despite the former premier’s limited interactions with his family and legal team in recent months due to restrictions that the PTI has challenged in court.

“The party’s stance in this regard is clear: transferring Imran Khan to any location without informing his family and physicians or commencing any medical examination or treatment in their absence, is a grave violation of the Constitution of Pakistan and jail rules,” the PTI said in a statement issued late Saturday.

“This will not be acceptable under any circumstances.”

The party said it rejects “any form of secrecy” around Khan’s health, adding that hiding facts about it would be tantamount to putting the former premier’s health at risk. 

The PTI said Khan’s medical examinations and treatments should be ensured immediately in the presence of his personal physicians and at least one member of his family.

“Furthermore, it is essential that this process be conducted independently under the supervision of reputable doctors and hospitals recommended by the party,” it said.

“The government will be held entirely responsible for the consequences of any secretive or unilateral action.”

GOVERNMENT’S RESPONSIBILITY’

Parliamentary Affairs Minister Tariq Fazal Chaudhry said on Saturday that the government gives priority to humanitarian considerations and legal requirements. 

“Providing facilities to every prisoner in accordance with the law is the government’s responsibility,” Chaudhry wrote on social media. 

Meanwhile, Khan’s lawyers on Saturday filed a petition in the Islamabad High Court seeking suspension of a Dec. 20, 2025 conviction in a graft case involving state gifts, arguing that continued incarceration during the pendency of the appeal would result in a grave miscarriage of justice.

The petition says the judgment is under substantive legal challenge and requests suspension of the sentence until the appeal is decided, a remedy available under Pakistani law when serious questions are raised about a conviction.

Khan, who was ousted from office via a parliamentary vote in April 2022, has been in jail since August 2023 after his conviction on a slew of charges he says are politically motivated.

The opposition alliance has vowed to continue its sit-in outside Parliament House until Khan is shifted to the hospital.