xenia
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As usual politics n personal interests of elites of pakistan take precedence over much needed reforms..ah how long this will go on?
Tax panel asked not to venture into agriculture
By Mubarak Zeb Khan
ISLAMABAD, Oct 28: While the international community is pushing Pakistan for taxing the rich, the government is learnt to have stopped its tax committee from exploring ways of taxing the agriculture income and asked it to only identify loopholes to be plugged to raise a few billion rupees for debt servicing.
Finance Minister Dr Abdul Hafeez Shaikh has replaced a task force on taxation set up by former finance minister Shaukat Tarin with the Reform Coordination Group with sub-groups on income tax, customs, sales tax and federal excise with a limited scope of only identifying loopholes in the existing taxation system.
A well-placed source in the finance ministry told Dawn on Thursday that the government was facing strong resistance from landowners in the national and provincial assemblies to the proposal of levying tax on agricultural income and, therefore, the RCG had come up with similar recommendations for taxing the already taxed people.
Almost every tax committee or taxation commission constituted since 1947 has come up with similar results - narrow tax base, low compliance, widespread exemptions, low coverage and lack of audit, the source said, adding that the current committee had pointed out the same problems.
He was of the opinion that withdrawal of exemptions recommended by the RCG could raise only a few billion rupees, but the exemption on agricultural income had motivated income tax assessees to show a part of their income as agricultural income to evade income tax.
The United States recently asked Pakistan to tax its rich before seeking any financial help.
A knowledgeable source said the RCG had never discussed the possibility of taxing agricultural income for fear of a political backlash and, therefore, limited its work to the existing taxation system.
A few attempts have been made since 1947 to impose a central tax on agricultural income, but because of a constitutional ban inherited from the government of India Act 1935 it could not be implemented, leading to violation of the canon of horizontal equity and opening up scope for evasion and litigation.
A finance ministry official said the government of Zulfikar Ali Bhutto had imposed a tax on agricultural income through Finance (Supplementary) Ordinance of 1977, but before the act could be enforced Gen Ziaul Haq promulgated martial law and suspended the tax. The matter was then left to the provinces.
A farm tax was levied in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa in 1948, Punjab in 1951 and Sindh in 1965. But the issue had since then been put on the back burner, the official said, adding that because of strong opposition by powerful landlords no law on the tax could be tabled in parliament.
A senior official in the Federal Board of Revenue said the RCG did not recommend any new measure to increase the tax-to-GDP ratio. He said that the FBR in various studies had already pointed out sectoral contribution to federal taxes and their further potentials. The issue is not of identification but implementation of the studies already conducted on expansion of tax base, the official said, adding that tax committees were only reproducing findings of the previous committees.
According to the FBR study, total collection of the tax on agricultural income stands at only Rs1 billion, mostly from Punjab. Sindhs contribution has been insignificant, while Balochistan and Khyber Pakhtunkhwa have no contribution at all.
Agriculture is the base of about one-fifth of GDP, but it contributes only over one per cent to the tax revenue.
Tax panel asked not to venture into agriculture
By Mubarak Zeb Khan
ISLAMABAD, Oct 28: While the international community is pushing Pakistan for taxing the rich, the government is learnt to have stopped its tax committee from exploring ways of taxing the agriculture income and asked it to only identify loopholes to be plugged to raise a few billion rupees for debt servicing.
Finance Minister Dr Abdul Hafeez Shaikh has replaced a task force on taxation set up by former finance minister Shaukat Tarin with the Reform Coordination Group with sub-groups on income tax, customs, sales tax and federal excise with a limited scope of only identifying loopholes in the existing taxation system.
A well-placed source in the finance ministry told Dawn on Thursday that the government was facing strong resistance from landowners in the national and provincial assemblies to the proposal of levying tax on agricultural income and, therefore, the RCG had come up with similar recommendations for taxing the already taxed people.
Almost every tax committee or taxation commission constituted since 1947 has come up with similar results - narrow tax base, low compliance, widespread exemptions, low coverage and lack of audit, the source said, adding that the current committee had pointed out the same problems.
He was of the opinion that withdrawal of exemptions recommended by the RCG could raise only a few billion rupees, but the exemption on agricultural income had motivated income tax assessees to show a part of their income as agricultural income to evade income tax.
The United States recently asked Pakistan to tax its rich before seeking any financial help.
A knowledgeable source said the RCG had never discussed the possibility of taxing agricultural income for fear of a political backlash and, therefore, limited its work to the existing taxation system.
A few attempts have been made since 1947 to impose a central tax on agricultural income, but because of a constitutional ban inherited from the government of India Act 1935 it could not be implemented, leading to violation of the canon of horizontal equity and opening up scope for evasion and litigation.
A finance ministry official said the government of Zulfikar Ali Bhutto had imposed a tax on agricultural income through Finance (Supplementary) Ordinance of 1977, but before the act could be enforced Gen Ziaul Haq promulgated martial law and suspended the tax. The matter was then left to the provinces.
A farm tax was levied in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa in 1948, Punjab in 1951 and Sindh in 1965. But the issue had since then been put on the back burner, the official said, adding that because of strong opposition by powerful landlords no law on the tax could be tabled in parliament.
A senior official in the Federal Board of Revenue said the RCG did not recommend any new measure to increase the tax-to-GDP ratio. He said that the FBR in various studies had already pointed out sectoral contribution to federal taxes and their further potentials. The issue is not of identification but implementation of the studies already conducted on expansion of tax base, the official said, adding that tax committees were only reproducing findings of the previous committees.
According to the FBR study, total collection of the tax on agricultural income stands at only Rs1 billion, mostly from Punjab. Sindhs contribution has been insignificant, while Balochistan and Khyber Pakhtunkhwa have no contribution at all.
Agriculture is the base of about one-fifth of GDP, but it contributes only over one per cent to the tax revenue.