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Existing tax system threat to economy

ghazi52

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Mar 21, 2007
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FBR chairman writes letter to PM: Existing tax system threat to economy

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KARACHI: The newly-appointed FBR Chairman Shabbar Zaidi has attributed accumulation of untaxed wealth to bungled taxation policies and administrative flaws, saying the existing system poses threats to economy, it was learnt on Friday.

“As a result (of) serious flaws in the policy and administrative aspects, there has been substantial accumulation of untaxed wealth,” Zaidi said in a letter to the Prime Minister Imran Khan.

The FBR chief was critical of the tax collection’s reliance on indirect taxes. “Pakistan’s tax collection system generates less than 10 percent of GDP. Even that collection is made in form of indirect taxes, not being real income,” he said in the letter available with The News. “This system is not workable and it represents a serious economic threat for the country.”

The country has been struggling to broaden the tax base with what the FBR chairman said only one percent of the people carrying the burden of the entire state. Despite all efforts and punitive taxation, less than two million people – out of 220 million population – have so far been encouraged to file returns. The FBR’s collection amounted to Rs2.983 trillion in July-April period of the current fiscal year of 2018/19 against the desired target of Rs3.337 trillion. The provisional shortfall has so far ballooned to Rs355 billion so far. The country, which is about to enter an International Monetary Fund’s $6 billion loan program, is under an immense pressure to mobilise tax resources to introduce fiscal discipline.

A seasoned tax expert Zaidi is a firm believer of the documentation of the economy, reiterating his resolve to bring untaxed sector into the mainstream through various measures, including assets declaration scheme and data gathering. The cash-strapped government has decided to launch movement for increasing tax collections equitably on all the taxable income. It is acquiring data of economic transactions from third parties, including banks, excise and taxation departments and other offices to net tax evaders.

“We all agree that the present system is not sustainable for us and our generation. Social services can only be provided where there is adequate collection the revenue,” he said.

The FBR chairman said large numbers of businesses are reluctant to enter into the tax system. Out of 100,000 companies registered with the FBR, only 50 percent file returns.

Total number of industrial electricity connections is 341,000 whereas there are only 40,000 sales tax registrants. There are more than 3.1 million commercial electricity connections, while more than 90 percent of them are outside the tax system.

Zaidi further acknowledged the tax burden on manufacturing sector. “Over 75 percent of tax is collected from the manufacturing sector that is seriously affecting the industrial sector.”

Businessmen said the informal economy has outgrown the formal economy due to presumptive tax scheme that encourages mispricing, widely known as under-invoicing, in foreign trade, The Pakistan Business Council, representing at least 78 private sector businesses in a report estimated five billion dollars of under-invoicing in a year, calling for comprehensive review of import valuations.
 
Its also very difficult to become tax payer in this country. After retirement, this year it took my father 3 months to become tax payer. He couldn’t get his own retirement money moved. We went through 3 lawyers to get it done.

There was this due date in which we had to file our income tax,which we did. After 1 week ,we had become invalid tax payer. Again we had to file our income tax payer because FBR thankfully extended the date for filling taxes. It was a very very frustrating process.
 
Its also very difficult to become tax payer in this country. After retirement, this year it took my father 3 months to become tax payer. He couldn’t get his own retirement money moved. We went through 3 lawyers to get it done.

There was this due date in which we had to file our income tax,which we did. After 1 week ,we had become invalid tax payer. Again we had to file our income tax payer because FBR thankfully extended the date for filling taxes. It was a very very frustrating process.
This is exactly why the tax system needs to be rebuilt, simplified, and become uniform across the Republic. This is what financial institutions and economists say when they say that Pakistan needs tax reforms.

Shitty tax laws are costing Pakistan tens of billions of dollars.

Imagine, if everyone eligible to pay taxes actually did, Pakistan would no longer need to borrow money, because it wpuld hagw a surplus budget, it would no longer have to depend on forreign aid; It would truly be an independent country.
 
This is exactly why the tax system needs to be rebuilt, simplified, and become uniform across the Republic. This is what financial institutions and economists say when they say that Pakistan needs tax reforms.

Shitty tax laws are costing Pakistan tens of billions of dollars.

Imagine, if everyone eligible to pay taxes actually did, Pakistan would no longer need to borrow money, because it wpuld hagw a surplus budget, it would no longer have to depend on forreign aid; It would truly be an independent country.

Hope to see some good contribution to this thread. The issue needs good recognition of the faults with personal experience to back it (@Hiraa post is good start) and tackle them head on.

Hopefully someone can pass it on to the govt ears too.

I think Pakistan needs to create and implement a sound tax database in this era of (easier) big data input and handling.

It would need a good layer of decent bureaucrats picked personally (for the tax dept) and then judged/reviewed on merit as regards to their performance at some appropriate frequency.

Bad sorts need to be shown the door (if they gummed things up on purpose or took bribes etc) or prosecuted if there was grand malfeasance of some level.

Then at same time, how best to make use of what law and order apparatus +litigation apparatus you have needs to be worked out....for prioritising and making examples out of the worst offenders so far. This again needs a good, thorough system scrub (at least the highest layers so they can get to work on the layers underneath) I would think. something like a special court system + law enforcement purely just for tax dept....so you dont have to clean out the whole forest and you get something responsive on the areas that are critical right now (to the economic recovery).
 
I don't really see a flaw in the Modi way of documenting the economy: go digital. All of a sudden, you have the details of every single transaction at hand. That's documentary evidence of the entire trail of money changing hands. It would satisfy FATF requirements, increase the tax net, simplify transactions, the benefits keep adding up.
 
Fact is pak citizen pays taxes on rach and everything it consumes but where is all money going neither fbr nor govt told us where are these gst toll taxes mobile taxes used if combine thede are worth in trillions
 
Fact is pak citizen pays taxes on rach and everything it consumes but where is all money going neither fbr nor govt told us where are these gst toll taxes mobile taxes used if combine thede are worth in trillions

you should hear budget speeches or read documentation or at least articles to know where this money is going it is not that difficult
 
Regrettably, my countrymen want everything for nothing. Perhaps that is why they pin high hopes of winning nature's lottery like finding more oil than Kuwait before even the drilling has started!.

Every Pakistan must realize that all facilities such as good roads, good hospitals, inexpensive high-quality educational institutions, clean streets & safe drinking water cost money and money doesn't grow on trees. If you want good public services, you must pay for it too.

Problem is that this lack of realization is not limited to the illiterates but highly educated and world-wise citizens are also guilty. Admittedly, there is a lot of corruption in every echelon of society. Nevertheless, this cannot be an excuse to justify why less than 1% of the population pays income Incom Tax.

Things have gone from bad to worse in my lifetime; is it going to change now? I sincerely wish it but don't really expect it.
 
A seasoned tax expert Zaidi is a firm believer of the documentation of the economy, reiterating his resolve to bring untaxed sector into the mainstream through various measures, including assets declaration scheme and data gathering.

He says this and at the same time this is happening courtesy of FBR:

The collection of withholding data is aimed at getting information about mega transactions taking place and through this data the FBR would be able to identify non filers that could be used for broadening of tax base. With the help of CNICs the FBR will be able to trace them easily and can pursue them to come into the tax net.
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The participants discussed different options and in the end it was agreed that the banks will write letters to their account holders having balance of Rs500,000 and above as on 30.04.2019 and guide them about availing themselves of amnesty.

You know what effect the above is going to have? People will avoid using the banking system and the documentation of the economy that he's seeking will be retarded.
 
I don't really see a flaw in the Modi way of documenting the economy: go digital. All of a sudden, you have the details of every single transaction at hand. That's documentary evidence of the entire trail of money changing hands. It would satisfy FATF requirements, increase the tax net, simplify transactions, the benefits keep adding up.
Going fully digital has its own flaws. The biggest being "loss of data", and it does happen.

Paper records and paper economy has the upside that there are physical records of transactions.

I suspect that the answer is in between the physical and digital somewhere. Perhaps incorporating some parts of both would offset the negatives.
 
Going fully digital has its own flaws. The biggest being "loss of data", and it does happen.

Paper records and paper economy has the upside that there are physical records of transactions.

I suspect that the answer is in between the physical and digital somewhere. Perhaps incorporating some parts of both would offset the negatives.

These days the cloud is so secure, major banks are preferring it over their in-house systems. This is not to propose we should keep our data in a foreign cloud. But we should invest in in-house infrastructure for it. As long as there is paper money, there will be some kind of tax evasion.
 

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