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Govt decides to abolish tax exemptions for SEZs, STZs
Govt decides to abolish tax exemptions for SEZs, STZs

Express Tribune

time2 days ago

  • Business
  • Express Tribune

Govt decides to abolish tax exemptions for SEZs, STZs

At high tax rates, profit margins for sellers decrease, leaving them with options to pass on the burden to consumers, compromise on the quality of products, evade taxes or find cheaper illicit goods. photo: file The Senate Standing Committee on Finance was informed on Thursday that the federal government has decided to abolish tax exemptions for Special Economic Zones (SEZs) and Special Technology Zones (STZs) in line with the IMF conditions. During a meeting chaired by Senator Saleem Mandviwalla on Thursday, Federal Board of Revenue (FBR) Chairman Rashid Mahmood Langrial briefed the committee that under the IMF agreement, all tax exemptions must be phased out by 2035. He stated that going forward, no SEZ or STZ will receive any form of tax relief. "Our hands are tied," Langrial remarked, adding that tax concessions and reduced rates across various sectors are being withdrawn. The committee rejected budget proposals for the next fiscal year, including imposing a carbon levy of Rs2.50 per litre on petroleum products, removing the 10 per cent cap on the debt service surcharge for electricity consumers and introducing a levy on small vehicles. The senators termed these measures as burdensome for the public. Regarding autonomous public-sector entities, Senator Anusha Rahman raised concerns about institutions holding vast investments despite minimal staffing. She cited the example of the Evacuee Trust Property Board (ETPB), which she said is managed by only 12 people but has Rs13 billion invested. She questioned why such institutions are allowed to retain and invest their revenues and called for reforms or exemptions in the Public Finance Management Act (PFMA) if needed. The officials replied that bodies such as Nadra, CDA, and Karachi Port Trust are allowed to invest their funds and earn profits, and they pay taxes on these earnings. However, the committee chairman said none of these institutions had actually paid taxes recently. The officials briefed the committee that Nadra had paid a tax amounting to Rs8 billion during the last two years. The FBR chief proposed amendments to the PFMA, but the committee opposed them, insisting that revenue from all government-owned bodies must be deposited into the Federal Consolidated Fund. The Ministry of Finance stated that the proposed amendment would allow autonomous bodies to retain and spend their income independently, but Anusha Rahman strongly opposed it, demanding that such entities remain accountable to the national treasury and sought balance sheets of such institutions. The committee also reviewed proposed changes to property taxation. According to FBR officials, the withholding tax on property sales valued at Rs100 million has been increased from 8 per cent to 9.5 per cent, while properties worth less than Rs100 million will be taxed at 8.5 per cent. For properties valued below Rs50 million, the rate will be 7.5 per cent. Additionally, the Finance Bill 2025 includes stricter measures against non-filers. While the property purchase tax for non-filers has been reduced, the burden has shifted to sellers. The committee approved a proposal to impose a 5 per cent tax on foreign online platforms.

Enterprises in SEZs, STZs: NA panel recommends capping tax exemptions
Enterprises in SEZs, STZs: NA panel recommends capping tax exemptions

Business Recorder

time5 days ago

  • Business
  • Business Recorder

Enterprises in SEZs, STZs: NA panel recommends capping tax exemptions

ISLAMABAD: The National Assembly Standing Committee on Finance and Revenue on Monday recommended a budget proposal of the government regarding capping the tax exemptions to enterprises in Special Economic Zones (SEZs) and Special Technology Zones (STZs) — a condition of the International Monetary Fund (IMF), at the earlier of tax year 2035 or the completion of the 10 year period. The committee which met with Naveed Qamar in the chair also gave nod to the budgetary proposals of tax on pension income exceeding Rs10 million for individuals under the age of 70. Federal Minister for Finance and Revenue Muhammad Aurangzeb told the committee that tax exemptions are not economically sustainable. The SEZs already enjoying them were not productive as per the desired results. Authority says Pakistan's new Special Technology Zone will boost tech exports by $350mn The Federal Board of Revenue (FBR) chairman said that a sunset clause for SEZs and STZs are included in the finance bill. He said that IMF was stressing to limit this tax exemption for SEZs and STZs to 2027; however, after hectic efforts the deadline was extended to 2035. The committee members raised serious concerns over the move, while saying that it would discourage the investors and not a single dollar investment would be brought to these zones. However, the committee gave its nod after it was told that it was an IMF benchmark and needed to be fulfilled. The committee gave its nod for another IMF-backed proposal by removing the distinction between Table-I and II, all Non-Profit Organizations (NPOs) are now subject to standard compliance requirements to qualify for 100 percent tax credit. This ensures better oversight, reduces misuse of blanket exemptions and align tax benefit with clearly defined regulatory conditions, the FBR added. Regarding the rate deduction for payment through digital means and cash on delivery, the FBR informed the committee that the measures is expected to generate around Rs59 billion. However, instead of the current proposed different rates of levy ranging 1-2 percent, the Finance Ministry informed the committee that a single levy would be proposed after consultations and the committee would be informed accordingly. The committee also gave its nod to the budgetary proposals of tax on pension income exceeding Rs10 million for individuals under the age of 70. Tax at five percent rate proposed on pension income exceeding Rs10 million for individuals less than 70- years old for high earnings pensioners to broaden the tax base. Talking about FBR transformation plan interventions (already approved by the Cabinet), the FBR chairman summarised it as war on significant economic transactions by non-filers and filers without resources, financial disclosures for high value translations, conditions access to financial transactions, use of technology to enhance compliance, data sharing for risk based enforcement and expanded audit capacity with confidentiality safeguards. Copyright Business Recorder, 2025

Tensions with India may derail bailout scheme's goals: IMF warns Pakistan
Tensions with India may derail bailout scheme's goals: IMF warns Pakistan

Business Standard

time18-05-2025

  • Business
  • Business Standard

Tensions with India may derail bailout scheme's goals: IMF warns Pakistan

The International Monetary Fund (IMF) has warned Pakistan ahead of the release of the next tranche of its bailout programme, saying that tensions with India could "heighten risks to the scheme's fiscal, external, and reform goals". In its first review of the over $1 billion bailout programme, the IMF noted the tensions between India and Pakistan following the April 22 Pahalgam terror attack, in which 26 people were killed. The report said that so far, the market reaction in Pakistan had been modest, with the stock market retaining most of its recent gains and spreads widening moderately. "The rising tensions between India and Pakistan, if sustained or deteriorate further, could heighten enterprise risks to the fiscal, external and reform goals of the program. Reputational risks could also come from any perceived lack of evenhanded or if there was a perceived misuse of fund disbursements," the report said. The IMF report places Pakistan's defence allocation for the upcoming fiscal year at PKR 2.414 trillion, reflecting a 12 per cent increase or PKR 252 billion more than the previous year. In contrast, the government has signalled plans to allocate over PKR 2.5 trillion, marking an 18 per cent rise, following the recent escalation with India earlier this month. IMF imposes fresh conditions on Pakistan The IMF also slapped 11 new conditions on Pakistan for the release of the next tranche of its bailout programme. This takes the total conditions imposed on Pakistan to 50. A key condition requires the parliamentary approval of the FY26 budget—projected at PKR 17.6 trillion, including PKR 1.07 trillion for development spending—by the end of June 2025, in line with IMF programme targets. On the provincial side, the four federating units must implement new agricultural income tax laws, supported by digital platforms for taxpayer registration, return processing, and compliance measures, with a deadline of June 2025. The IMF also expects Islamabad to publish a Governance Action Plan, based on findings from the Fund's Governance Diagnostic Assessment, to address persistent governance weaknesses. Pakistan must also unveil a post-2027 financial sector strategy, outlining long-term institutional and regulatory reforms from 2028 onwards. In the energy sector, four conditions have been introduced to ensure cost recovery and reduce circular debt: the rebasing of electricity tariffs by July 1, 2025, a semi-annual gas tariff adjustment by February 15, 2026, legislation to make the captive power levy permanent, and the removal of the PKR 3.21/unit cap on the debt servicing surcharge—currently hindering full cost recovery. The IMF has mandated Pakistan to draft a plan for phasing out incentives related to Special Technology Zones and other industrial parks by 2035, with the reform roadmap due by the end of this year. The Fund also wants the government to introduce legislation in Parliament by July 2025 to lift quantitative restrictions on importing used vehicles, initially for cars less than five years old—expanding the current limit set at three years. IMF loan to Pakistan On May 9, the IMF approved the immediate disbursement of about $1 billion to Pakistan under the ongoing Extended Fund Facility. The global lender said that Pakistan's 37-month EFF was approved on September 25, 2024, and "aims to build resilience and enable sustainable growth", with priorities including entrenching macroeconomic sustainability. India opposed the IMF's extension of fresh loans to Pakistan, saying they could be misused for financing state-sponsored cross-border terrorism. New Delhi also abstained from voting at the crucial IMF meeting.

IT firms demand major tax reforms
IT firms demand major tax reforms

Express Tribune

time26-04-2025

  • Business
  • Express Tribune

IT firms demand major tax reforms

Listen to article Pakistan's Information Technology (IT) companies have strongly demanded the government to rationalise taxes on the IT sector in order to enhance its exports manifold in the coming years. Muhammad Umair Nizam, Senior Vice Chairman of the Pakistan Software Houses Association (P@SHA), called for a major reduction in the burden of income tax on employees' salaries from the current 35% to a flat 5% in order to facilitate IT companies in maintaining their exports growth. This step, he explained, would help IT companies match the competitiveness of remote workers in the IT sector who are paying a minimal tax rate of just 1% as freelancers. "P@SHA is looking forward to the government granting a 10-year tax holiday to encourage new foreign and domestic investments, the streamlining of foreign exchange regulations, greater facilitation from commercial banks, the removal of anomalies in sales tax, the allocation of dedicated funds for skill development and the acceleration of the operational materialisation of Special Technology Zones (STZs) and IT parks across the country," he said. He stressed that the government should urgently do away with the heavy 10% tax currently imposed on the transaction of debit cards linked to foreign exchange accounts, as this eats up a huge share of the earnings of IT companies and severely impacts their profitability. Highlighting the sector's potential, he said that information technology has now become the fastest-growing export industry of Pakistan, and the country is poised to achieve a record $4 billion in its IT exports for the fiscal year 2025, covering the period from July 2024 to June 2025. Nizam also pointed out that Pakistan is rapidly expanding into new sub-sectors and verticals across various spheres of technology, but expressed concern that conventional regulatory frameworks continue to create bottlenecks due to their inability to adapt to the fast-paced evolution of the global tech industry. "P@SHA's role is to translate the needs and demands of our member companies into policies, incentives, and actions. Whether it's about export taxation, ease of doing business, payroll taxation, international visibility, or digital infrastructure - we take those concerns straight to the power corridors," he added. Mehwish Salman, an award-winning serial entrepreneur and CEO of Datavault Pakistan, stated that the government must allocate a handsome portion of the national budget toward promoting emerging technologies, such as artificial intelligence, cybersecurity, the internet of things, and data engineering, to grow the country's exports and foster greater adaptation of digitisation across various sectors. In this regard, she said the government should continue its capacity-building programmes by partnering with IT companies to arrange boot camps in various cities, aiming to upskill working professionals and bring them up to par with global standards. Salman also stressed that the government should introduce subsidies for female professionals seeking certifications and specialised training, along with scholarships for female students, in order to encourage and significantly increase their contributions. "Through effective industry-academic liaison, we need to upgrade our curriculum based on emerging technologies at both private and public sector universities to meet the increasing demand for highly skilled human resources in the country's IT sector," she said. She further suggested that the applications of AI tools and coding should be introduced to students at the secondary school level, which would promote a culture of research, development, and innovation among the younger generation. Meanwhile, former Chairman of P@SHA, Muhammad Zohaib Khan, said that IT remains the only industry in Pakistan with an industry trade surplus in the vicinity of 75%, and pointed out that it is the only sector that can grow at an exponential rate, develop a skilled workforce, create employment opportunities rapidly, help curtail the country's growing trade deficit, and keep the current and external accounts healthy.

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