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Pakistanis loaded with very heavy Taxes

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Pakistanis loaded with very heavy Taxes

The 72nd ‘technocratic’ budget is no different from earlier ‘bureaucratic’ budgets

According to experts, Dr. Abdul Hafeez Shaikh, Advisor to Prime Minister Imran Khan on Finance, Revenue and Economic Affairs, and his team, did not have a choice but to present yet another conventional budget in the given circumstances to balance the books and meet many preconditions of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) for the proposed bailout package of US$ 6 billion. Considering these constraints, budget 2019-20 is loaded with heavy taxes and little effort to cut unproductive expenditures.

The revenue target fixed at Rs5500 billion is being widely criticised as too ambitious when the economy is in shambles and growth rate is dwindling. However, the main faultline of the budget is its failure to provide any long-term strategy for self-reliance boosting value added exports, collecting taxes as per real tax potential, right-sizing of monstrous government machinery and achieving growth rate of over 7 percent for a decade. In the absence of adequate resources available to the federal government and burgeoning debt burden, the main theme of the budget speech of Hammad Azhar, State Minister for Revenue, was first achieving fiscal stabilisation and then growth.

The crux of taxation proposals is to further crush the fixed-income groups and substantially increase indirect taxes (customs duty, sales tax, excise, etc, on a number of items, including items of common use as sugar and ghee). Strangely, after offering amnesty, no measure is included in the Finance Bill 2019 to confiscate untaxed assets if it is not availed. There is also absence of pragmatic measures for tapping the real tax potential by taxing the wealth of the rich, like imposing Income Support Levy as was done in 2013 but repealed the very next year.

The Finance Bill 2019 confirms that the rich and mighty would continue to retain and amass colossal wealth without paying due taxes. No new tax is imposed on them while major burden is shifted to the middle class, the poor and small businesses.

Sadly, the corporate sector is still burdened with many withholding tax provisions, freezing of rate of 29 percent for the next two years and enhanced turnover tax. The taxation scheme presented by the Government of Pakistan Tehreek-i-Insaf (PTI) is going to harm the SME sector and benefit only the rich.

By keeping higher sales tax rate of 17 percent intact, the bias against the middle class and the poor is shown as it takes larger slice of their income than that of the affluent segments. In Finance Bill 2019, there are no concrete measures to incentivise industralisation. Less investment in industry means less job opportunities. The Finance Bill 2019 could have provided tax breaks for industries and businesses creating new jobs and giving some percentage employment to women. This should have been the top priority, but is completely missing.

The PTI government in its first budget has failed to give concrete plans to overcome the main economic challenges faced by the country — fiscal, trade, current account deficits, stagnation in industrial growth, etc. The 72nd ‘technocratic’ budget is no different from earlier ‘bureaucratic’ budgets.

The budget 2019-20 contains the same old clichés about economic revival but, in fact, through erratic taxation working against it. It is a painful reality that during the Decade of Democracy (2008-18), the governments of Pakistan Peoples Party and Pakistan Muslim League (Nawaz) failed to initiate any fundamental reforms to overcome issues like resource mobilisation, social mobility, shortage of skilled manpower, non-availability of affordable power supply and rapid industrial and infrastructure development. The PTI Government made tall claims about these during election campaigns but now all these have been conveniently ignored.

The budget 2019-20 has failed to provide steps to bridge the huge tax gap that is more than 100 percent of actual collection. (Details in Taxes for growth, The News, November 8, 2015). The mighty sections of society do not pay due taxes, enjoy tax-free benefits and also get State lands at throwaway prices. The government, instead of taxing them and cracking down on undocumented economy and benami transactions, is offering amnesties and immunities as the mighty sections of society are engaged in these transactions.

Also read: At the cost of development

One of the main tools of tax policy is to increase the level of savings and capital formation in the private sector partly for borrowing by the government and partly for enhancing investment resources within the private sector for economic development. On the contrary, Pakistani economic managers have not only failed to achieve this goal, they are ruthlessly taxing capital gains arising out of immovable property and shares to destroy creation of capital and incentives for investment that can boost growth. Tax is a byproduct of growth. With more growth we would have more taxes. The prevalent anti-growth taxes are the real cause of retarded economic growth, burgeoning fiscal deficit and insurmountable debt burden.

There is a consensus that the existing tax policy has been stifling economic growth and widening the rich-poor divide. There was a hope that PTI would reformulate it to provide an equitable, pragmatic and investment-oriented environment, integrating efficient tax administration with simplified tax laws that are easily comprehensible and hassle-free from implementation perspectives. Unfortunately, this perspective is completely missing in the Finance Bill 2019.


http://tns.thenews.com.pk/loaded-heavy-taxes/#.XRD4C4gzYdU

*Ya Allah !*
Give me Strength to pay my;

(1). Income Tax
(2). General Sales Tax
(3). Capital Value Tax
(4). Value Added Tax
(5). Central Sales Tax
(6). Service Tax
(7). Fuel Adjustment Charges
(8). Petrol Levy
(9). Excise Duty
(10). Customs Duty
(11). Octroi Tax (tax levied on entry of goods into municipal area)
(12). TDS Tax (tex deduction at source)
(13). Employment Status Indicator Tax (ESI Tax)
(14). Property Tax
(15). Government Stamp Duty
(16). Aabiana (tax on water for agricultural land)
(17). Ushr
(18). Zakat (deducted on money from the banks)
(19). Dhal Tax
(20). Local Cess
(21). PTV License
(22). Parking Fee (at least 5 times a day)
(23). Capital Gains Tax (CGT)
(24). Water Tax
(25). Flood Tax (for heavens sake - there are no floods now)
(26). Professional Tax
(27). Road Tax
(28). Toll Gate Fee
(29). Securities Transaction Tax (STT)
(30). Education Cess
(31). Wealth Tax
(32). Transient Occupancy Tax (TOT)
(33). Congestion Levy Complusory Deduction
(34). Super Tax
(35) With holding taxes
(36) Education fee
(37) SECP levy
and also toufeeq to pay
(a). Heavy Education Fees
(b). Donations at schools
(c). Chandas at Mosques etc
(d). Beggers Black Mailing at every Road Corner.

*O' my Lord* - If I have some money left then I will try to boost my business to pay more to *FBR* employees, government officials etc.

For more news and updates, stay tuned to
*Regulatory Updates of Pakistan* by using this link: https://www.facebook.com/groups/RegulatoryUpdatesOfPakistan/


 
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Pakistanis loaded with very heavy Taxes

The 72nd ‘technocratic’ budget is no different from earlier ‘bureaucratic’ budgets

According to experts, Dr. Abdul Hafeez Shaikh, Advisor to Prime Minister Imran Khan on Finance, Revenue and Economic Affairs, and his team, did not have a choice but to present yet another conventional budget in the given circumstances to balance the books and meet many preconditions of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) for the proposed bailout package of US$ 6 billion. Considering these constraints, budget 2019-20 is loaded with heavy taxes and little effort to cut unproductive expenditures.

The revenue target fixed at Rs5500 billion is being widely criticised as too ambitious when the economy is in shambles and growth rate is dwindling. However, the main faultline of the budget is its failure to provide any long-term strategy for self-reliance boosting value added exports, collecting taxes as per real tax potential, right-sizing of monstrous government machinery and achieving growth rate of over 7 percent for a decade. In the absence of adequate resources available to the federal government and burgeoning debt burden, the main theme of the budget speech of Hammad Azhar, State Minister for Revenue, was first achieving fiscal stabilisation and then growth.

The crux of taxation proposals is to further crush the fixed-income groups and substantially increase indirect taxes (customs duty, sales tax, excise, etc, on a number of items, including items of common use as sugar and ghee). Strangely, after offering amnesty, no measure is included in the Finance Bill 2019 to confiscate untaxed assets if it is not availed. There is also absence of pragmatic measures for tapping the real tax potential by taxing the wealth of the rich, like imposing Income Support Levy as was done in 2013 but repealed the very next year.

The Finance Bill 2019 confirms that the rich and mighty would continue to retain and amass colossal wealth without paying due taxes. No new tax is imposed on them while major burden is shifted to the middle class, the poor and small businesses.

Sadly, the corporate sector is still burdened with many withholding tax provisions, freezing of rate of 29 percent for the next two years and enhanced turnover tax. The taxation scheme presented by the Government of Pakistan Tehreek-i-Insaf (PTI) is going to harm the SME sector and benefit only the rich.

By keeping higher sales tax rate of 17 percent intact, the bias against the middle class and the poor is shown as it takes larger slice of their income than that of the affluent segments. In Finance Bill 2019, there are no concrete measures to incentivise industralisation. Less investment in industry means less job opportunities. The Finance Bill 2019 could have provided tax breaks for industries and businesses creating new jobs and giving some percentage employment to women. This should have been the top priority, but is completely missing.

The PTI government in its first budget has failed to give concrete plans to overcome the main economic challenges faced by the country — fiscal, trade, current account deficits, stagnation in industrial growth, etc. The 72nd ‘technocratic’ budget is no different from earlier ‘bureaucratic’ budgets.

The budget 2019-20 contains the same old clichés about economic revival but, in fact, through erratic taxation working against it. It is a painful reality that during the Decade of Democracy (2008-18), the governments of Pakistan Peoples Party and Pakistan Muslim League (Nawaz) failed to initiate any fundamental reforms to overcome issues like resource mobilisation, social mobility, shortage of skilled manpower, non-availability of affordable power supply and rapid industrial and infrastructure development. The PTI Government made tall claims about these during election campaigns but now all these have been conveniently ignored.

The budget 2019-20 has failed to provide steps to bridge the huge tax gap that is more than 100 percent of actual collection. (Details in Taxes for growth, The News, November 8, 2015). The mighty sections of society do not pay due taxes, enjoy tax-free benefits and also get State lands at throwaway prices. The government, instead of taxing them and cracking down on undocumented economy and benami transactions, is offering amnesties and immunities as the mighty sections of society are engaged in these transactions.

Also read: At the cost of development

One of the main tools of tax policy is to increase the level of savings and capital formation in the private sector partly for borrowing by the government and partly for enhancing investment resources within the private sector for economic development. On the contrary, Pakistani economic managers have not only failed to achieve this goal, they are ruthlessly taxing capital gains arising out of immovable property and shares to destroy creation of capital and incentives for investment that can boost growth. Tax is a byproduct of growth. With more growth we would have more taxes. The prevalent anti-growth taxes are the real cause of retarded economic growth, burgeoning fiscal deficit and insurmountable debt burden.

There is a consensus that the existing tax policy has been stifling economic growth and widening the rich-poor divide. There was a hope that PTI would reformulate it to provide an equitable, pragmatic and investment-oriented environment, integrating efficient tax administration with simplified tax laws that are easily comprehensible and hassle-free from implementation perspectives. Unfortunately, this perspective is completely missing in the Finance Bill 2019.


http://tns.thenews.com.pk/loaded-heavy-taxes/#.XRD4C4gzYdU


what are the exact suggestions to fix things ?
 
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what are the exact suggestions to fix things ?
  1. Massively increase Tax base not types of Taxes to same ppl, and must Tax the rich which has colossal wealth in and out of country including Corporates, introduce Agriculture Tax - not just kill the salaried middle class income.
  2. Investigate where is the Sales Tax going?
  3. Increase manufacturing and export. Immediate look at the fiscal, trade, current account deficits, stagnation in industrial growth, etc
  4. Crack down on undocumented economy and benami transactions, is offering amnesties and immunities as the mighty sections of society are engaged in these transactions.
  5. Get the looted $350 Billion out of country into Pakistan ASAP.
 
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...and this article is loaded with very heavy looking fluff.

No figures, no stats, no specific citations of clauses which the author has a problem with.

I stopped reading after this

Strangely, after offering amnesty, no measure is included in the Finance Bill 2019 to confiscate untaxed assets if it is not availed
 
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...and this article is loaded with very heavy looking fluff.

No figures, no stats, no specific citations of clauses which the author has a problem with.

I stopped reading after this

What that line means is simply that compliance with whitening of assets by taking advantage of the amnesty will never work without any punitive measures. After all, why would anyone do it otherwise?
 
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Look government by its very nature is a farmer. We are tax livestock. Back in the old days why did ppl want to conquer territories? It was to gain control of the tax base and extort extort extort. Govt will never curtail its spending. It will look to increase revenue. Always. No wonder the whole world is in debt.
 
. . .
*Breaking News Alert*

کراچی میں مکان مالکان کے لیے بری خبر

بہت ہوگئی کمائی اب ٹیکس دینا ہوگا، وفاقی حکومت نے ایف بی آر کو ایکشن مین آنے کا کہہ دیا،

کراچی میں اب گھر کا رینٹ سرکاری مقرر قیمت پر ہوگا اور سرکاری ریٹ پے کرائے پر دے دیے جاسکیں گے

ہر رینٹ والے گھر پر مالک مکان کو 17 سے 25 پرسنٹ ٹیکس دینا ہوگا۔

اسٹیٹ ایجنسی کھولنے کے لیے پچاس ہزار روپیوں میں تین سال کے لئے لائسنس جاری کیے جائیں گے اور اسٹیٹ ایجنسیوں کو مانیٹر کر کے سالانہ اسٹیٹ ایجنسی کی کمائی پے 25 پرسنٹ ٹیکس دینا ہوگا۔
کراچی میں ایک سے زیادہ اپنی نام گھر، پلاٹ، اپارٹمنٹ، بنگلہ، خریدنے والے کو 10 سے 20 پرسنٹ ٹیکس دینا ہوگا۔

اس کے علاوہ کراچی میں گھر بنگلہ پلاٹ بیچنے سیل والے کو ساتھ 5 پرسنٹ ٹیکس دینا ہوگا۔ایف بی آر نے کراچی کے تمام تھانوں کو مکان مالکان کے کیا کے لئے لکھ دیا گیا ہیں دوسرے مرحلے میں جلد دوسرے شہروں کو بھی ٹیکس میں لیا جائے گا اس کا آغاز کراچی سے کیا جا چکا ہے۔

اس خبر کے بعد کراچی میں دس سے پندرہ پرسنٹ پلاٹ گھر اپارٹمنٹ کی قیمتیں گر چکی ہے دوسرے مرحلی میں کراچی کے مختلف علاقوں کا الگ الگ سیل ریٹ بھی سرکاری طور پر نافذ کیا جائے گا

سرکاری ریٹ سے زیادہ کوئی پلاٹ گھر بنگلہ سیل نہیں کیے جاسکے گے۔
 
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What that line means is simply that compliance with whitening of assets by taking advantage of the amnesty will never work without any punitive measures. After all, why would anyone do it otherwise?

We'll only see that after 30th June once the amnesty ends.

Going to prison for 7 years is a pretty hard hitting punitive measure if you ask me.

Because the OP does not know the meanings of a finance bill. Confiscation is not a financial rather administrative and legal issue.

OP has problems with much more than just comprehension of the finance bill I believe!
 
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There are better articles out there. Take this one for instance. If you can look past the snide remarks about NAB you find it has some substance to it.

There is an underlying cause for this behaviour. Taxes are unpopular and they result in citizens making governments accountable. In Pakistan, an unwritten social contract has existed between the ruling elite and the rich. By rich, I mean all people who fall in the direct taxpaying category. They are all rich in the Pakistani context. The rich (including the middle class) don’t pay their taxes, sometime not even their utility bills, and in return they don’t make governments accountable.
 
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We'll only see that after 30th June once the amnesty ends.

Going to prison for 7 years is a pretty hard hitting punitive measure if you ask me.

Absolutely correct. Let us see what the figures end up being at the expiry of the amnesty.
 
. .
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