Fiscal Policy in Pakistan
Fiscal Policy in Pakistan
Fiscal Policy in Pakistan
Government Receipts
(a) Tax Revenue: In taxes we have direct taxes such as income tax, and
wealth tax. Indirect taxes such as central excise, sales tax, and
custom duty. Direct tax comprises about 70% of Pakistan’s total tax
revenue.
(c) Surcharges: Surcharges on natural gas and petroleum fall under this
category.
2. Capital Receipts: Capital receipts include external borrowing and internal non-bank
borrowings consisting of unfunded debt, public debt, treasury and deposit receipts
besides the revenue account surplus and the surplus generated by public sector, etc.
3. External Resources: External resources are loans and grants which come from various
sources. These sources include consortium, non-consortium and Islamic sources of aid:
(c) Islamic Aid: Bilateral aid from Islamic countries come from Saudi
Arabia, Kuwait, Qatar, United Arab Emirates, Turkey, Lebanon, Libya
and Iran. While multilateral Islamic sources of aid are OPEC Fund, and
IDB.
Loans and grants received by Pakistan can be classified into ‘project’ and ‘non-
project aid’. Non-project aid can be further decomposed into food, non-food, BOP
and Relief aid.
4. Self-Financing by Autonomous Bodies: This is actually the surplus left after meeting
all the expenses of these bodies. This surplus is available to government for revenue
and development expenditures.
Government Expenditure
1. Defence,
2. Debt servicing,
4. General administrative,
6. Others.
1. The narrow base enigma has been a base in Pakistan’s tax structure from the
beginning.
2. In 1987 when population of the country was more than a hundred million, the total
number of taxpayer was just over a million.
3. The main base taxes imposed are direct and indirect taxes.
a. Direct tax of the Federal Government comprises of income tax, wealth tax and
corporate tax
b. Indirect tax, on the other hand, consists of custom duty, excise duty, sales tax,
import duty and all others.
4. Indirect tax contributes the predominant share to the total tax collection. Direct
taxes have persistently dropped their share in total tax revenue.
5. Indirect tax, on the other hand, contributes more than 70% of the total tax revenue.
Indirect tax is regressive. It may cause the inflation to rise and its incidence is fall on
poor class of the economy.
(i) Net borrowings by the government from the banking system which
includes the State Bank of Pakistan (SBP) and commercial banks
but excludes non-banking institutions and individuals, and
(ii) Net borrowings by the Government from the SBP only.
But the public debt does not only constitute the above sources, it also includes
money lent to Government out of the balances of the banks which would have been
held if the Government had not borrowed them.
It was planned in Third Five-Year Plan that there will be no deficit financing during
the said plan but the government had to revise the plan. In the Fourth Five-Year
Plan there were annual plans and major upsets in the economy. In the Fifth and
Sixth Five-Year Plans, though there were very large amounts of foreign remittances
but there was not remarkable reduction in deficit financing.