July-March FY18: Govt’s tax collection falls Rs129b short of target
ISLAMABAD:
The shortfall in tax revenues widened to Rs129 billion as the Federal Board of Revenue (FBR) collected Rs2.621 trillion in first nine months of the current fiscal year despite blocking tax refunds and taking advances from companies.
Provisional net revenue receipts of Rs2.621 trillion from July through March fell short of the nine-month target of roughly Rs2.750 trillion, according to FBR officials.
The collection, however, was Rs352 billion or 15.5% higher than the revenues received in the same period of previous fiscal year.
“The FBR during first nine months of the current financial year has recorded provisional net revenue collection of over Rs2.621 trillion against the Rs2.260 trillion collected during the same period of previous fiscal year,” said an official statement of the FBR.
It added that the figure did not include collections on account of book adjustment.
The FBR’s statement put last year’s collection at Rs2.260 trillion, but the State Bank of Pakistan’s data estimated it at Rs2.269 trillion. The FBR needs to achieve 19.15% growth in tax receipts to meet the annual target of Rs4.013 trillion.
It is trailing at a time when the Prime Minister’s Office and the General Headquarters alike are worried about the state of affairs in the FBR. The FBR has not been able to broaden the tax base.
In order to hide its performance, the FBR’s top brass has blocked the flow of information about actual tax collection to some of its members. The FBR’s annual book and Director of Research and Statistics Books are not being published this year to keep the information secret.
Its monthly collection was even worse. Tax authorities collected Rs361 billion in March, which was only Rs14 billion or 4% higher than the same month of previous year. The monthly collection was short of the Rs391 billion target by Rs30 billion. The tax collection has dropped below the 19% required rate of growth for the third consecutive month despite imposition of 25.5% sales tax on high-speed diesel, far higher than the standard 17% sales tax.
Heavy regulatory duties on essential and non-essential goods and 10% depreciation of the rupee are not even sufficient to achieve the tax target.
The latest figures have dashed hopes of achieving the annual tax collection and fiscal deficit targets. The Rs2.621-trillion collection in the first nine months constituted 65.2% of the annual target. The FBR was required to achieve at least 68.5% of the annual target in the period.
Government’s non-tax revenues are also falling short of the target, which will make it impossible to achieve the budget deficit goal of 4.1% of gross domestic product (GDP).
The International Monetary Fund (IMF) has projected that the deficit could widen to 5.5% of GDP. However, its assumption was based on the annual tax collection of Rs3.958 trillion.
Results for the first nine months indicate that tax collection will even fall below the IMF’s expectations.
Discussions had taken place between the Ministry of Finance and the FBR to lower the annual tax collection target, said sources in the FBR. However, this will be done on the premise of paying sales tax refunds, which the FBR has been withholding for the past many years to inflate the revenue collection figures.
According to some estimates, the FBR has so far withheld Rs350 billion worth of tax refunds. However, it officially acknowledges only Rs128 billion in sales tax refunds. The FBR has also taken huge advances from big corporations to get closer to the nine-month target, sources said.
A senior FBR official confided that in certain cases, the FBR had taken advance income tax for the July-September quarter of next fiscal year 2018-19.
The FBR is also struggling to improve the narrow tax base as despite numerous extensions, the number of income tax return filers stood at 1.260 million by March 1.
The number of return filers from all main sectors of the economy has actually shrunk in the past five years and it is only the salaried class that is providing face saving for the government.
Published in The Express Tribune, April 1st, 2018.
https://tribune.com.pk/story/167440...vts-tax-collection-falls-rs129b-short-target/
ISLAMABAD:
The shortfall in tax revenues widened to Rs129 billion as the Federal Board of Revenue (FBR) collected Rs2.621 trillion in first nine months of the current fiscal year despite blocking tax refunds and taking advances from companies.
Provisional net revenue receipts of Rs2.621 trillion from July through March fell short of the nine-month target of roughly Rs2.750 trillion, according to FBR officials.
The collection, however, was Rs352 billion or 15.5% higher than the revenues received in the same period of previous fiscal year.
“The FBR during first nine months of the current financial year has recorded provisional net revenue collection of over Rs2.621 trillion against the Rs2.260 trillion collected during the same period of previous fiscal year,” said an official statement of the FBR.
It added that the figure did not include collections on account of book adjustment.
The FBR’s statement put last year’s collection at Rs2.260 trillion, but the State Bank of Pakistan’s data estimated it at Rs2.269 trillion. The FBR needs to achieve 19.15% growth in tax receipts to meet the annual target of Rs4.013 trillion.
It is trailing at a time when the Prime Minister’s Office and the General Headquarters alike are worried about the state of affairs in the FBR. The FBR has not been able to broaden the tax base.
In order to hide its performance, the FBR’s top brass has blocked the flow of information about actual tax collection to some of its members. The FBR’s annual book and Director of Research and Statistics Books are not being published this year to keep the information secret.
Its monthly collection was even worse. Tax authorities collected Rs361 billion in March, which was only Rs14 billion or 4% higher than the same month of previous year. The monthly collection was short of the Rs391 billion target by Rs30 billion. The tax collection has dropped below the 19% required rate of growth for the third consecutive month despite imposition of 25.5% sales tax on high-speed diesel, far higher than the standard 17% sales tax.
Heavy regulatory duties on essential and non-essential goods and 10% depreciation of the rupee are not even sufficient to achieve the tax target.
The latest figures have dashed hopes of achieving the annual tax collection and fiscal deficit targets. The Rs2.621-trillion collection in the first nine months constituted 65.2% of the annual target. The FBR was required to achieve at least 68.5% of the annual target in the period.
Government’s non-tax revenues are also falling short of the target, which will make it impossible to achieve the budget deficit goal of 4.1% of gross domestic product (GDP).
The International Monetary Fund (IMF) has projected that the deficit could widen to 5.5% of GDP. However, its assumption was based on the annual tax collection of Rs3.958 trillion.
Results for the first nine months indicate that tax collection will even fall below the IMF’s expectations.
Discussions had taken place between the Ministry of Finance and the FBR to lower the annual tax collection target, said sources in the FBR. However, this will be done on the premise of paying sales tax refunds, which the FBR has been withholding for the past many years to inflate the revenue collection figures.
According to some estimates, the FBR has so far withheld Rs350 billion worth of tax refunds. However, it officially acknowledges only Rs128 billion in sales tax refunds. The FBR has also taken huge advances from big corporations to get closer to the nine-month target, sources said.
A senior FBR official confided that in certain cases, the FBR had taken advance income tax for the July-September quarter of next fiscal year 2018-19.
The FBR is also struggling to improve the narrow tax base as despite numerous extensions, the number of income tax return filers stood at 1.260 million by March 1.
The number of return filers from all main sectors of the economy has actually shrunk in the past five years and it is only the salaried class that is providing face saving for the government.
Published in The Express Tribune, April 1st, 2018.
https://tribune.com.pk/story/167440...vts-tax-collection-falls-rs129b-short-target/