Pakistan’s tax-heavy budget goes into effect today ahead of IMF loan talks

Labourers load sacks of rice onto a truck at a market in Karachi on June 10, 2024. (AFP/File)
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Updated 01 July 2024
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Pakistan’s tax-heavy budget goes into effect today ahead of IMF loan talks

  • Pakistan’s parliament passed federal budget last week despite protests from opposition
  • Economists say budget in line with IMF recommendations, to help Pakistan secure bailout package 

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s tax-heavy $67.76 billion budget for the new fiscal year takes effect from today, Monday, which Islamabad hopes will prove instrumental in securing another bailout package from the International Monetary Fund (IMF) to stave off a macroeconomic crisis.  

President Asif Ali Zardari signed the Finance Bill 2024-25 into law on Sunday after the country’s parliament passed it last week amid an annual inflation projection of up to 13.5 percent for June. The bill comes ahead of more talks with the international lender for a loan of up to $8 billion to avert a debt default for Pakistan, the slowest-growing economy in South Asia.

The ambitious budget, with a challenging tax revenue target of Rs13 trillion ($46.66 billion) has drawn the ire of the government’s allies and opposition alike, who have demanded relief for the salaried class and the poor. The revenue collection target for FY25 is almost 40 percent higher from the last fiscal year, drawing criticism from the business community as well. 

“I have already said we are moving in a positive way,” Finance Minister Muhammad Aurangzeb said on Sunday, speaking about the fresh IMF program during a media interaction in the federal capital. “During July we should get into a good agreement.”

Pakistan began discussions about a new loan with IMF officials soon after completing a $3 billion program that helped the country stave off a sovereign debt default last year. The international lender sent its delegation to Pakistan in May to hold negotiations with the new government which did not materialize into a staff-level agreement. 

Pakistan has sought IMF loans in recent years due to a combination of economic challenges, including significant fiscal and current account deficits, declining foreign exchange reserves and rising public debt.

These economic vulnerabilities have been exacerbated by external shocks like fluctuating commodity prices and internal challenges such as political instability and policy inconsistency.

The government has maintained the country’s economy is on the mend but considers the new bailout important to ensure a substantial financial cushion.

TAX-LADEN BUDGET 

Pakistan’s finance ministry said in a report on Friday that the budget is gearing the country toward “an era of sustainable and inclusive growth.” It projected an annual consumer price inflation for June 2024 between 12.5 percent to 13.5 percent, up from 11.8 percent in May.

The rise in the tax target is made up of a 48 percent increase in direct taxes and a 35 percent hike in indirect taxes over revised estimates of the current year. Non-tax revenue, including petroleum levies, is seen increasing by 64 percent.

The tax would increase to 18 percent on textile and leather products as well as mobile phones besides a hike in the tax on capital gains from real estate. 

Workers will also get hit with more direct tax on income. Opposition parties, mainly parliamentarians backed by the jailed former Prime Minister Imran Khan, and top trade bodies have rejected the budget, saying it will be highly inflationary and lead to industry shutdowns. 

Pakistan’s central bank has also warned of possible inflationary effects from the budget, saying limited progress in structural reforms to broaden the tax base meant increased revenue must come from hiking taxes.

The upcoming year’s growth target has been set at 3.6 percent with inflation projected at 12 percent.


Ex-senator among 3 killed in blast while campaigning for by-election in northwest Pakistan

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Ex-senator among 3 killed in blast while campaigning for by-election in northwest Pakistan

  • Former independent senator Hidayat Ullah Khan’s car was targeted with bomb blast in northwestern Bajaur district
  • Khan was on his way to attend a by-election campaign for his nephew Najeeb Ullah, confirms police official

PESHAWAR: A former Pakistani senator was among three persons killed in a blast on Wednesday while they were campaigning for an upcoming by-election in the country’s northwestern Bajaur district, police and rescue officials confirmed. 

Ex-senator Hidayat Ullah Khan was killed in a blast that targeted his vehicle in Bajaur district’s Damadola area while he was on his way to attend an election campaign for his nephew Najeeb Ullah, Bajaur Police Spokesperson Israr Khan said. 

“The intensity of the blast is yet to be confirmed,” the police spokesperson told Arab News. “The Bomb Disposal Squad [BDS] has been to the site for investigation.”
 
Khyber Pakhtunkhwa’s Rescue 1122 Spokesperson Bilal Faizi confirmed three persons had died in the blast. 

“Three dead bodies and one critically injured person were shifted to District Headquarters Hospital Bajaur,” he said, adding that two others were injured in the incident. 
 
Khan, who was an independent senator from 2018 to 2024, was the son of former National Assembly lawmaker Hajji Bismillah Khan and the younger brother of ex-KP governor Shaukat Ullah Khan.
 
He was campaigning for his nephew Najeeb Ullah Khan, who is contesting the by-election on the PK-22 provincial assembly seat in Bajaur as an independent candidate where polling is set to take place on July 11. 
 
Polling on the PK-22 constituency was postponed on Feb. 8 after independent candidate Rehan Zeb was killed by unidentified men days before the election.
 
Both the provincial and National Assembly seats from the constituency were won by Zeb’s brother Mubarak Zeb. He decided to vacate the PK-22 seat in favor of the National Assembly one, following which Pakistan’s election regulator then announced polling for the PK-22 constituency on July 11. 

TTP DENIES RESPONSIBILITY

Pakistan’s tribal areas bordering Afghanistan to the west have seen a surge in militant attacks since Nov. 2022 when a fragile truce between the Pakistani Taliban or the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) broke down. 

Pakistan blames the TTP for the surge in violence, accusing it of targeting Pakistani security forces, politicians and civilians from Afghanistan in a bid to enforce its strict version of Islamic law in the country. 

The TTP, however, did not take responsibility for the blast. In a statement released to the media, the banned outfit accused the Pakistan Army of killing the former senator to malign it. 

“We would like to reiterate once again that we consider only the security forces and their personnel as our targets,” the TTP said.  

Pakistan’s government announced last month it would launch a new anti-terrorism operation titled “Azm-e-Istehkam” or Resolve for Stability to root out militants in the country.


Pakistan petroleum union announces strike against new tax from July 5, government rejects ‘blackmailing’

Updated 57 min 29 sec ago
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Pakistan petroleum union announces strike against new tax from July 5, government rejects ‘blackmailing’

  • Petroleum dealers association says government’s move to impose 0.5 percent advance tax will “devastate” their business
  • Pakistani official says government has taken steps to ensure “smooth” supply of petroleum products across the country 

ISLAMABAD: The Pakistan Petroleum Dealers Association (PPDA) have announced it would close petrol pumps across the country on July 5 to protest the government’s decision to impose an advance tax on turnover, saying the move would “devastate” their businesses already reeling from high taxes and inflation. 

Petroleum dealers in Pakistan are demanding the government withdraw an advance income tax of 0.5 percent imposed in the recently passed federal budget 2024-25.

Pakistan’s tax-heavy $67.76 billion budget for the new fiscal year came into effect on Monday amid an annual inflation projection of up to 13.5 percent for June. The ambitious budget with a challenging tax revenue target of Rs13 trillion ($46.66 billion) has drawn the ire of the government’s allies and opposition alike. The revenue collection target for the new fiscal year is almost 40 percent higher than the last fiscal year. 

The PPDA says its members are earning minimal profit due to staggering inflation and high taxes. Talks between the government and the association this week failed to break the deadlock between the two sides. 

“We are going on a nationwide strike starting July 5 and plan to close petrol pumps across the country,” PPDA Chairman Abdul Sami Khan told Arab News on Wednesday. 

“Our demand is simple: the government should immediately withdraw the advance tax decision.”

Khan said the move would “devastate” the petrol pump business in the country, adding that dealers would be left with no other option but to wind up their businesses for good if the government does not reverse its decision.

“We are ready to discuss our concerns and possible solutions with the government,” Khan said. “We request the prime minister, petroleum minister and finance minister to immediately abolish this tax, otherwise we will be unable to continue running our businesses.”

Imran Ahmed, the deputy general of oil at Pakistan’s petroleum ministry, rejected the strike call. He said the government would not entertain “blackmailing tactics” but was willing to discuss petroleum dealers’ genuine concerns. 

“We will not support the strike or such tactics,” he told Arab News. “This new advance tax applies to all traders, not only petroleum dealers.”

Ahmed said the government is in talks with the dealers and their representatives, whom he said have also met officials of the Federal Board of Revenue (FBR), Pakistan’s tax authority. 

He said the ministry has instructed oil marketing companies to keep as many sites open as possible to ensure a smooth supply of petroleum products in the country. 

“We have also instructed PSO [Pakistan State Oil] to ensure maximum supply and storage of petroleum products by keeping their sites open,” Ahmed said. 
 


Japanese climber dies after summiting Pakistan’s ‘Golden Peak’ mountain

Updated 03 July 2024
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Japanese climber dies after summiting Pakistan’s ‘Golden Peak’ mountain

  • Onishi Hiroshi, 64, was part of a team comprising four Japanese climbers and two Pakistani porters 
  • Hiroshi, who summited Golden Peak mountain on July 1, died after falling into crevasse, says official

KHAPLU, GILGIT-BALTISTAN: A 64-year-old Japanese climber, who summited the 7,027-meter high Spantik “Golden Peak” mountain earlier this week, was found dead in Pakistan’s northern Gilgit-Baltistan region on Wednesday, officials confirmed.

Japanese mountaineer Onishi Hiroshi fell into a crevasse, a deep crack formed in glaciers or ice sheets, while descending from Camp II of the Spantik mountain on Tuesday, Nagar district’s Deputy Commissioner Ata ur Rehman Kakar said. 

Kakar said Hiroshi was part of a four-member team of Japanese climbers and two Pakistani porters, who summited Golden Peak on July 1. 

“The dead body has been recovered and the deceased identified as 64-year-old Japanese climber Onishi Hiroshi,” Kakar told Arab News. “The body has safely been brought to Camp I. The other three Japanese climbers are safe.”

In June, two Japanese climbers went missing during their attempt to summit the same peak. The body of Ryuseki Hiraoka, 55, was found 300 meters below Camp 3 while authorities were unable to locate the second climber, 36-year-old Atsushi Taguchi. 

Pakistan is home to five of the world’s tallest mountains that loom above 8,000 meters, including the K2 and Nanga Parbat mountains, known for their treacherous climbs.

Spantik, more popularly called the Golden Peak due to a distinct golden hue cast upon it at sunrise, is largely viewed as more accessible for climbers. 

Several climbers die in Pakistan every year while trying to reach the summit of some of the world’s highest mountains, including K2, which is in Pakistan’s north.


Pakistan’s tallest man passes away on Alam Channa’s death anniversary, once the world’s tallest 

Updated 03 July 2024
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Pakistan’s tallest man passes away on Alam Channa’s death anniversary, once the world’s tallest 

  • 30-year-old Zia Rasheed was 8 feet tall, had several height-related medical conditions 
  • Channa held Guinness world record as tallest living man between 1982-1998 at 7.7 feet tall

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s tallest man Zia Rasheed died at the age of 30 on July 2, local media widely reported, coincidentally the 26th death anniversary of Alam Channa, another Pakistani who was once the tallest living person on earth.

Rasheed is believed to have reached the height of 8 feet by the time he was 18, but his stature brought with it a host of illnesses associated with being too tall. The current tallest man in the world, Sultan Kosen from Türkiye, stands at a height of 8 feet 3 inches, around three inches taller than Rasheed. 

Height is a risk factor for multiple health conditions such as cellulitis, skin abscesses, chronic leg ulcers, and osteomyelitis. Height is also believed to be related to the incidence of diabetes, heart disease and stroke.

“Zia Rasheed, the tallest person in Pakistan, died after protracted ailments on Tuesday,” Pakistan’s Dawn newspaper report said, adding that the youngest of five brothers had been unwell for a long time and was laid to rest in his native village near Vehari district in Pakistan’s central-eastern Punjab province.

“He suffered from a leg-related illness that caused him considerable discomfort and pain for much of his life,” the Samaa news website said. 

“Unfortunately, Zia never received the proper medical treatment he needed. Despite his condition, he remained in Pakistan, unable to secure the resources necessary to seek better medical facilities abroad.”

“Rasheed had a normal childhood until he experienced a significant growth spurt at the age of 12, which was later attributed to a malfunctioning pituitary gland,” Samaa added. “This glandular issue caused an overproduction of growth hormone, leading to his extraordinary height.”

Ironically, Rasheed died the same day as Alam Channa, a Pakistani who held a Guinness Book of World Record as the tallest living man in the world between 1982 and 1998, measuring 7.7 feet. A local celebrity and common fixture at moving circuses for most of his life, he suffered from kidney failure and high blood pressure and was sent by the government for treatment to the US. 

He was admitted to the Westchester Medical Center in Valhalla, New York but died on July 2, 1988. He is buried in Sehwan, a town in Sindh known for the famous shrine of Sufi saint, Lal Shahbaz Qalandar, where Channa’s family members as helpers had worked for decades. He himself worked for the shrine in his youth before joining the circus.


Pakistan National Disaster Management Authority launches community engagement app

Updated 03 July 2024
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Pakistan National Disaster Management Authority launches community engagement app

  • Pakistan is bracing for heavy rains as the monsoon season began this week
  • Floods in 2022 killed over 1,700 people, causes $30 billion in economic losses

ISLAMABAD: The National Disaster Management Authority has launched the ‘Pak NDMA Disaster Alert’ mobile app to ensure “effective community engagement and timely risk communication” as the South Asian nation braces for heavy downpours this monsoon season, Radio Pakistan reported on Wednesday. 
Pakistan is recognized as one of the most vulnerable countries to climate change effects in the world. Unusually heavy rains in June 2022 triggered flash floods in many parts of the country, killing over 1,700 people, inflicting losses of around $30 billion, and affecting at least 30 million people.
Last week, the NDMA warned of heavy rains in the Sindh and Punjab provinces, which it said could face an “emergency” situation. 
“App will generate alerts and update guidance for all organizations and individual responders in national and provincial languages with audio and video formats,” Radio Pakistan reported. 
“Alerts will enable the people and responders to promptly implement the disaster management plans keeping them ahead of crises before they strike. Geo tagged alerts will outline likely impacts and suggest actions to be taken at individual and community level.”
On Tuesday, Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif formed a high-level committee to handle potential emergencies during monsoon rains, which started this week. The NDMA briefed the prime minister that all four provinces were expected to receive heavy rains in the first and second weeks of July.
“The forum was informed that this year’s monsoon rains in Pakistan will move from the southeast to the north,” APP said. “Rainfall is expected in the Potohar region and the eastern part of Punjab during the first week of July.”
In Punjab, heavy rains are expected in Rawalpindi, Sargodha, Gujranwala, Lahore, and Faisalabad, and scattered rainfall anticipated in Bahawalpur, Multan, Sahiwal, and Dera Ghazi Khan divisions in the second week of July, the NDMA said. 
A flood-like situation is expected in the Sutlej, Chenab, and Ravi rivers during the first two weeks of August, the NDMA said, adding that it had finalized preparations for relocation and emergency response in the areas surrounding these rivers.
“In Sindh, Karachi, Mirpur Khas, Nawabshah, Sukkur, and Hyderabad are expected to experience heavy rains in the second and fourth weeks of July,” state-run APP news agency said on Tuesday. “Additionally, monsoon showers are forecasted for Tharparkar, Badin, Thatta, and Umarkot in the third week of August.”
Heavy rains are expected in Hazara, Malakand, Mardan, Peshawar, Kohat, Bannu, and Dera Ismail Khan in Pakistan’s northwestern Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP) province during July. Monsoon rains in the province are expected to persist until the third week of August.
Heavy rains have also been forecast in Balochistan’s border areas located alongside Sindh’s coastal belt during the second and fourth weeks of July, and first two weeks of August, according to the NDMA.
“Additionally, significant rainfall is expected in Lasbela, Armada, Khuzdar, Barkhan, Sibi, and Zhob in the third week of August,” APP reported.