Dawn Editorial JULY 13
Dawn Editorial JULY 13
Dawn Editorial JULY 13
of Dawn.com
July 13 Join us on Facebook
2020
No FBR reform?
PAKISTAN’S tax policy is regressive, unfair, opaque and complex, and tax administration is one of the
most unproductive and corrupt anywhere in the world. Little wonder that there is hardly anyone who
shows any trust in the nation’s tax system. Though it’s a misplaced argument, most people, especially
businesspersons, would gladly pay more to the government indirectly than become part of a
cumbersome system. The tiny number of tax filers — who overwhelmingly comprise salaried persons —
and the collection of more than two-thirds of income tax through indirect withholding or advance tax
regimes testify to this sad fact. Similarly, our ports remain porous as Customs allows everyone to
understate or overstate the value of their international trade transactions according to their financial
interests — albeit for a price. The admission by senior officials of the FBR before a parliamentary panel
that refund claims of over Rs532bn had been blocked since 2014 to show higher growth in collection
speaks volumes for the performance of its 20,000-odd staffers, and how the board operates to
hoodwink government and people alike.
The present tax regime is a major reason behind the distortions in the economy and is at the heart of
our fiscal woes as the tax-to-GDP continues to hover around 10pc, one of the world’s lowest. Ever since
it took over, the current government has been struggling to turn around the FBR. During this period,
four FBR chairpersons, including one borrowed from the private sector, have had to leave for failing to
improve performance. An attempt to replace the FBR with the proposed Pakistan Revenue Authority in
winter was thwarted by its senior officers who refused to accept any restructuring or reform plan unless
it was ‘approved’ by them. Previous attempts at reform had also failed owing to stiff resistance from the
board’s senior officers. The changes in the now defunct CBR Act in 2007 had resulted in its rechristening
as the FBR but there was still no improvement in the revenue authorities’ culture or performance.
With the country’s fiscal situation becoming untenable mainly because of the FBR’s incompetence to
document the economy and generate enough tax revenues, the government urgently needs to
implement serious tax policy and administrative reforms. These reforms should focus on documentation
of the large informal economy, elimination of presumptuous taxation and withholding regime,
dismantling of incentives for tax evasion and dishonesty, simplification of tax laws, reduction in indirect
taxation, and so on, besides ensuring transparency and full disclosures. The objective should be to
evolve a tax policy that supports economic growth and bridges growing inequality in society by
removing tax exemptions and taxing all incomes irrespective of their source. As indicated, any move at
reform should anticipate opposition from within the FBR. The success of the effort will depend on the
government’s will to stand up to vested interests for the greater public good.
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An intellectual property
of Dawn.com
July 13 Join us on Facebook
2020
In this extraordinary time, the world needs compassion and leadership. Some experts have identified
that trade is essential to advancing global food security as the world’s transportation system moves
staple food that feeds over 2bn people each year. Restricted exports and limited movement of supplies
will lead to labour shortages and food shortages in importing countries. There are already examples of
countries throwing out harvests due to a shortage of farmhands. Countries must prioritise agriculture as
an essential business and ensure that markets have an adequate supply of affordable food. World
organisations and governments must work together to deliver food to vulnerable populations,
especially women and children and those in conflict zones, so that the most at-risk groups have access
to food despite restrictions.
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An intellectual property
of Dawn.com
July 13 Join us on Facebook
2020
Marghazar Zoo, in particular, had become notorious for being a place where animals went to suffer and
die. Besides Kaavan, last year, a video of a bear gasping for breath in the scorching heat was widely
shared. The year before that, another companionless bear died due to an apparent brain tumour. In
2018-19, several nilgais died from a suspected viral outbreak, though some believed it was due to a lack
of warm enclosures to keep them in at night. Some months before that, six deer were killed by a wolf
that broke into their enclosure, while intrusions from wild boars and jackals have also been reported.
Beyond the capital, similar deaths of wild animals have been reported from zoos in Karachi, Lahore and
Peshawar. The use of animals for entertainment is a cruel and increasingly antiquated concept: exotic
animals are brought into the country with great fanfare; only to leave the world prematurely and
unceremoniously. If the ‘greatness of a nation’ can be judged by the way its animals are treated, where
would we stand?
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