Govt passes tax-laden budget ahead of fresh IMF loan

News Image

MG News | June 28, 2024 at 04:10 PM GMT+05:00

0:00

June 28, 2024 (MLN): Pakistan's parliament moved to pass the government's tax-heavy finance bill on Friday for the coming fiscal year even as annual inflation was projected to rise to as much as 13.5% for June, as Reuters reported.

The bill comes ahead of more talks with the IMF for a loan of $6 to $8 billion to avert a debt default for Pakistan, the slowest growing economy in South Asia.

Finance Minister Muhammad Aurangzeb moved the finance bill in parliament, which was opened to seek amendments and debate by the ruling alliance led by Prime Minster Shehbaz Sharif and its opposition.

Speaker Sardar Ayaz Sadiq announced the move in a live TV telecast.

The government presented the national budget on June 12 with a challenging tax revenue target of 13 trillion rupees ($46.66bn) for the year starting July 01, up about 40% from the current year, to strengthen the case for a new rescue deal with the International Monetary Fund (IMF).

The budget is gearing the country towards an era of sustainable and inclusive growth, said a finance ministry report issued on Friday, which projected annual consumer price inflation for June 2024 between 12.5% to 13.5%, up from 11.8% in May.

"The government was implementing various administrative, policy and relief measures to control inflationary pressures," the report said.

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

The tax would increase to 18% 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, have rejected the budget, saying it will be highly inflationary.

Pakistan has projected a sharp drop in its fiscal deficit for the new financial year to 5.9% of gross domestic product (GDP), from an upwardly revised estimate of 7.4% for the current year.

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% with inflation projected at 12%.

Copyright Mettis Link News

Related News

Name Price/Vol %Chg/NChg
KSE100 158,329.39
431.34M
0.24%
375.92
ALLSHR 97,038.95
941.93M
0.31%
297.73
KSE30 48,327.14
148.71M
0.27%
128.20
KMI30 233,710.82
110.44M
0.44%
1016.65
KMIALLSHR 65,286.18
527.35M
0.40%
259.05
BKTi 42,500.94
86.40M
0.03%
11.38
OGTi 31,887.69
5.94M
0.34%
108.33
Symbol Bid/Ask High/Low
Name Last High/Low Chg/%Chg
BITCOIN FUTURES 117,185.00 117,795.00
116,905.00
-585.00
-0.50%
BRENT CRUDE 67.15 67.57
67.12
-0.29
-0.43%
RICHARDS BAY COAL MONTHLY 84.00 0.00
0.00
-0.40
-0.47%
ROTTERDAM COAL MONTHLY 94.00 94.50
94.00
0.45
0.48%
USD RBD PALM OLEIN 1,106.50 1,106.50
1,106.50
0.00
0.00%
CRUDE OIL - WTI 62.90 63.35
62.85
-0.36
-0.57%
SUGAR #11 WORLD 16.13 16.27
15.89
-0.14
-0.86%

Chart of the Day


Latest News
September 19, 2025 at 11:06 AM GMT+05:00

Oil slips on weak fuel demand despite fed’s first rate cut


September 19, 2025 at 10:20 AM GMT+05:00

SCRA balance rises Rs92.5m


September 19, 2025 at 10:10 AM GMT+05:00

ECC approves financing $390m rail deal for Reko Diq project


September 19, 2025 at 09:56 AM GMT+05:00

Service sector trade deficit increases by 61% MoM in August



Top 5 things to watch in this week

Pakistan Stock Movers
Name Last Chg/%Chg
Name Last Chg/%Chg