Pakistani tech firms urge 10-year tax stability, one-window compliance to ‘supercharge’ exports

A man walks out of the Federal Board of Revenue (FBR) office in Islamabad on July 4, 2024. (AFP/File)
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Updated 19 July 2025
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Pakistani tech firms urge 10-year tax stability, one-window compliance to ‘supercharge’ exports

  • Pakistan recorded monthly IT exports of $338 million in June, up by 14% year on year and by 3% month on month
  • Tech firms say they aren’t seeking subsidies, but predictability, digitalization and administrative simplification

KARACHI: Pakistan can unlock billions in tech investment if it gives investors predictable taxes, friction-free remittances and a single digital compliance experience, the Pakistan Software Houses Association (P@SHA) said on Friday.

P@SHA said it presented a “Continuity & Consistency reform package” to the Ministry of Finance earlier this year, laying out a small number of high-impact changes that would slash compliance costs, bring tens of thousands of remote digital workers into the formal tax net, and catalyze both domestic and foreign investment into Pakistani tech firms.

The requested changes are not subsidies; they are predictability, digitalization, and administrative simplification. Most steps can be budget-neutral or revenue-positive once increased documentation, broadened compliance, and higher recorded export flows are taken into account.

“Every serious investor, local or international, asks the same two questions: What will my tax exposure be, and will the rules change after I invest?” P@SHA Chairman Sajjad Syed said.

“Right now, innovators spend too much time navigating overlapping regimes and too little time building export-earning products. If we hard-code continuity and make compliance near effortless, capital will move to Pakistan.”

Pakistan tech firms have been demonstrating their growing potential in the IT sector by showcasing their products and services at global forums, including the LEAP tech conference in Riyadh and GITEX global exhibition in Dubai.

Pakistan recorded monthly IT exports of $338 million in June, up by 14% year on year and by 3% month on month, according to Karachi-based Toplines Securities brokerage and market research firm. This took Pakistan’s annual IT exports to $3.8 billion, up by 18% YoY, in the outgoing fiscal year that ended in June.

In its statement, P@SHA urged continuation of the 10-Year Final Tax Regime (FTR) on information technology/IT-enabled services (IT/ITeS) export income, removal of discrepancies in tax rates where Pakistani IT companies get penalized for running payrolls from Pakistan, exemption of the Capital Gains Tax to secure investor’s confidence among other measures.

The association proposed joint working sessions with the Federal Board of Revenue, Ministry of IT & Telecom, State Bank of Pakistan, National Tax Council, and provincial revenue authorities to translate its proposed reforms package into draft language, digital filing flows, and phased rollout milestones, recommending immediate start of technical work.

“Pakistan stands at an inflection point: with its young talent base, global client footprint, and expanding startup ecosystem, the country can compete for high-value digital work, if investors trust the rules,” it said. “P@SHA urges policymakers to seize this moment to send that signal.”


Weather authority forecasts of rains, thunderstorms in northwest Pakistan on Feb. 16-17

Updated 15 February 2026
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Weather authority forecasts of rains, thunderstorms in northwest Pakistan on Feb. 16-17

  • District administrations and rescue agencies have been asked to remain alert to deal with any possible emergency
  • The warning comes weeks after heavy snowfall blanketed several areas in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, cutting off villages

ISLAMABAD: The provincial disaster management authority (PDMA) has forecast rains and thunderstorms in Pakistan's northwestern Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP) province on Feb. 16-17, urging citizens to exercise caution during the forecast period.

Light to moderate rain is expected in Kurram, Bannu, North and South Waziristan, Lakki Marwat and Tank districts, according to the PDMA. Heavy rain and hail are likely in Dera Ismail Khan.

The provincial disaster management authority said it has instructed district administrations and related agencies to remain alert to deal with any possible emergency during this period.

"Citizens are directed to avoid going near weak and under-construction buildings, signboards, electricity poles and solar panels," the PDMA said on Sunday night.

"Instructions have been issued to keep main highways and connecting roads open for traffic at all times."

The warning comes weeks after heavy snowfall blanketed several mountainous areas in KP, blocking roads and cutting off villages.

Khyber, South Waziristan and Swat districts were the most affected, where rescuers evacuated dozens of stranded residents and tourists to safety.

The PDMA urged local administrations to take precautionary measures in view of the threat of flooding in rivers, streams and stormwater drains.

"Citizens are directed to avoid unnecessary travel during bad weather and stay in safe places," it said on Sunday. "Municipal bodies are directed to keep the drainage system clean in view of the threat of landslides and urban flooding."