KARACHI: The International Monetary Fund (IMF) resident representative in Pakistan on Friday denied media reports that the lending body is planning to ask Pakistan to increase taxes on salaries and business income, and increase the maximum threshold for petroleum levy.

Media reports had been circulating stating that the IMF asked Pakistan to cut the number of tax slabs for the salaried and business class from the existing seven to four, increasing tax incidence on the middle and upper-middle income group.

There have also been reports of an increase in the maximum petroleum development levy. “There are no plans at this time,” Esther Perez Ruiz, IMF’s resident representative in Pakistan, told Reuters in an email.

The South Asian nation is operating under a caretaker government after an IMF loan programme, approved in July, helped avert a sovereign debt default.

Under the $3 billion standby arrangement (SBA), Pakistan received $1.2 billion from the IMF as the first tranche in July.

Pakistan was facing an acute balance of payment crisis, with its foreign exchange reserves diminished to barely three weeks of controlled imports, along with historically high inflation and an unprecedented currency devaluation.

Under the bailout deal, the IMF also got Pakistan to raise $1.34 billion in new taxation to meet fiscal adjustments. The measures fuelled all time high inflation of 38% year-on-year in May, the highest in Asia, which still is hovering above 30%.

Comments

Comments are closed.

Muhammad Yahya Yahya Wasi Dec 16, 2023 11:11am
It appears that the Government machinery considers the salaried people as the main culprit of its failure. How easily and cruelly GoP ask salaried class to continue financing its incapability spread over the decades. All the burden of high taxation, removal of tax credits & inflation is being faced by salaried class who don't have any other remedy. Instead easing the unprecedented inflationary pressure, FBR and those who are actually charged with the policies/governance, keep mounting the difficulties for this class.
thumb_up Recommended (0)
Builder Dec 16, 2023 10:55pm
We haven't learnt any lessons from this deep financial turmoil - FBR seems clueless how to expand tax net, so if they need to increase revenues, they WILL increase salaried tax as that's a low hanging fruit. Energy sector is still in quagmire and clueless how to handle tons of IPPs with open mouth for capacity payments while distribution network can't even handle that much power. Politicians are on their usual fighting track again to get hold of elected chairs. I mean where are we heading to? Any sane person left in this country?
thumb_up Recommended (0)