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The bill also proposes an increase in rates of federal excise duty, income tax
and sales tax on services in the federal capital territory.
“Elites, not the common man, are beneficiary of these exemptions,” Mr Tarin
said, adding that tax exemptions of Rs343bn had been benefiting various
interest groups for the past 70 years. “We have targeted only those items
which are used by the elites.”
However, Mr Tarin said the levy of 17pc sales tax on some specific items would
raise Rs2bn, adding that the tax on these items would only affect the ordinary
people. “We have only increased the cost of imported luxury items,” he said,
adding that local supply of most items remained unchanged.
The bill proposes 17pc sales tax on a number of items which were earlier
exempted from the tax. The government terms these products luxury items
which include import of live animals, steak meat, fish, vegetables, high-end
bakery items, branded cheese, imported sausages, high-end cellphones and
import bicycles.
At the same time, a number of items is proposed in the bill for targeted
subsidy to minimise the impact of 17pc sales tax. These include oilcake, animal
feed, poultry feed, maize seed (for corn oil) and cottonseed (for oil mills).
Other items that will now attract 17pc tax on import are magazines and
fashion journals.
The targeted subsidy plan of Rs33bn has been proposed to protect any
segment of population which may get affected even indirectly by the
withdrawal of some exemptions, etc.
According to finance minister, the 17pc sales tax imposed on the items used by
common people would yield only Rs2bn for the government. These items
include personal computers, sewing machines, match boxes, iodised salt, red
chili and contraceptives.
Tax exemption is retained on basic food items — import and supply of rice,
wheat, meslin, and local supply of other grains. Exemptions continue on local
supply of fruits, vegetables, beef, mutton, poultry, fish, eggs, sugarcane and
beet sugar. Similarly, zero rating on milk and fat-filled milk is also retained.
In the agriculture sector, the reduced rate of 2pc on fertiliser at out-stage will
continue, along with multiple reduced rates on fertiliser inputs as currently
available. The sales tax exemption will continue on pesticide and tractors will
continue to be sold at 5pc tax rate.
Expectedly, the prices of medicines in the retail market should come down,
approximately by 20pc.
The finance minister in a briefing to the media said those crating a hue and cry
over the supplementary finance bill and the State Bank Pakistan (SBP)
autonomy bill were only politicising the technical matter without any
rationale. He also highlighted the importance of the SBP autonomy and said it
was essential for the overall growth of country’s economy.
The minister said the allegations being levelled against the government were
baseless because not every suggestion of the IMF had been accepted in the
SBP autonomy bill. “We need to understand that all those countries, which
have not granted independence to their central banks, like Turkey, have
suffered.”
He said the main purpose of granting autonomy to the State Bank was to end
government borrowings and claimed that the incumbent government had not
borrowed anything from the central bank over the past two-and-a-half years.
“Besides, there will be an SBP board appointed by the government to make
key decisions, while the State Bank will be answerable to the standing
committees of parliament, too,” the minister said.