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Why the new tax is a good idea

ajpirzada

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When it comes to the reformed general sales tax or RGST (since calling it VAT was apparently too provocative) the political parties currently opposing the law would do well to just grin and bear it. The law is brilliant policy and is likely to help the country restore fiscal balance in the long run.

Before explaining the benefits of the new proposed law that has most political parties screaming their opposition in rather unbecoming terms, it would perhaps be useful to disabuse ourselves of this notion that Pakistanis are somehow an overtaxed nation. We are anything but.

Even the most cursory glance at the tax to gross domestic product (GDP) ratio, currently at a miserable nine per cent, will attest to this fact. And while some of the more thoughtful left-wing critics of Pakistani taxation are correct in asserting that the system is at least theoretically regressive, in practice it is not.

Pakistanis are not overtaxed

The most common argument made against the current system is that by stressing the taxation of consumption instead of income, it effectively places a higher tax rate on lower income groups. This is true and especially relevant to the current debate since the RGST is a consumption tax and not an income tax. However, it would perhaps be useful to examine the effect of the existing sales tax on the population.

According to the Household Integrated Economic Survey 2008, conducted by the Federal Bureau of Statistics, the bottom 60 per cent of Pakistanis (by income) spend over 65 per cent of their income on food and housing, two categories of items that are not subject to the general sales tax. In essence, they pay 17 per cent taxes on only 35 per cent of their income, which comes to a 5.95 per cent effective tax rate.

It should also be pointed out that none but the top 20 per cent of households are eligible to pay income tax. So the 5.95 per cent effective sales tax is the only tax that the overwhelming majority of Pakistanis pay. This, of course, assumes that the companies they buy services from do not cheat on their taxes or otherwise fail to comply with the law. Taking non-compliance into account, the effective tax rate goes down even lower.
Having comprehensively refuted the notion that Pakistanis cannot bear the burden of more taxes, it is now possible to argue as to why the RGST is, in fact, nothing short of a brilliant idea.

RGST: setting the tax thieves on each other

The sheer brilliance of the RGST is best understood if it is called by its real name: the value-added-tax. The name says it all – it is a levy on the value added by a firm at each stage of the production process. Unlike the current sales tax, where only the retail level bears the burden of taxation, the VAT’s burden is distributed proportionately throughout the production chain, making it an inherently fairer tax.

But that is not the brilliant part. In order to understand the genius of the system, one must understand the mechanics of it, which is best illustrated by an example.

Let us take car manufacturing, which has several stages of production. In the first stage, a steel mill buys iron ore to make steel. VAT is levied on the difference between the cost of the iron ore and the price at which the mill sells its steel.

However, the way VAT normally works in other countries is that the steel mill pays the VAT on the full price of its product and then applies to the government to get a refund for the cost of its raw materials. The same procedure applies to the next stage, when the car parts manufacturer buys the steel and makes the car parts, paying the tax on the full price of its product and then later applying for a refund. The car manufacturer then does the same thing at the final stage of production.

The above chain illustrates a crucial point: the system relies on two parties reporting the exact same data on the size of their transaction. For instance, the car parts maker reports how much they sold to the car manufacturer, who in turn reports how much they paid the car parts maker. But neither side can collude with the other in tax evasion because what decreases one party’s liability directly increases it for the other. In short, there can be no honour among tax thieves.

The bane of the FBR’s existence

It would also be very easy for the government to determine exactly who is cheating on their taxes. Since there are only two parties involved, the one whose liability would be reduced if the other is telling the truth is most likely to be the tax evader.

Of course, this relies on the entire system being automated, which the FBR has been resisting, partly because several corrupt officials within the FBR extort bribes to help tax evaders get away with their crime, which would become more difficult if the system were put in place.

The system, of course, does not eliminate tax evasion. Of the 29 OECD member countries that implement the tax, The Economist reports that evasion rates range from 4 per cent to 17 per cent.

Yet it certainly makes life difficult for tax evaders, in addition to distributing the tax burden more fairly while at the same time improving the country’s fiscal balance. What is not to like?

The writer is a financial and management consultant based in Karachi.
Published in The Express Tribune, November 15th, 2010.


Why the new tax is a good idea – The Express Tribune
 
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@ajpirzada

Why exactly is there so much opposition to VAT? It works perfectly well in India & we are slowly moving towards a national Goods & Service Tax (GST). I think VAT has been brilliant because it reduces both corruption & deincentivises unbilled transactions.
 
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@ajpirzada

Why exactly is there so much opposition to VAT? It works perfectly well in India & we are slowly moving towards a national Goods & Service Tax (GST). I think VAT has been brilliant because it reduces both corruption & deincentivises unbilled transactions.

opposition is mainly political...... anyone with simplest understanding of economics will not oppose it.

ppl know zardari has a corruption ridden history. this gives political parties a much convenient stick to beat him with for point scoring. hence they oppose anything which has zardari's thumb print on it.

its for this reason u get to hear arguments like: zardari will eat all the tax money etc...

also the general perception also fueled by the media is that RGST is some new tax which it is not
 
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Summary of Tax Reforms

1. Pakistan is in dire need of increasing its tax revenues by implementing a broad-based modern form of sales tax on goods and services. The Sales Tax Act, 1990, was originally designed on the basis of accepted value added taxation doctrines but due to political compromises and revenue exigencies, it increasingly became distorted and narrow-based because of ever-expanding exemptions, special regimes, multiplicity of rates and several other deviations from international best concepts and practices. Resultantly, not only the tax base of sales tax and income tax has been eroded but also lack of documentation of the national economy has proved a big hindrance in the development of effective tax policy options.

2. Under the existing constitutional framework, the Federal government can impose taxes on the sales and purchases of goods imported, exported, produced, manufactured or consumed. The Federal government has been levying excise duty on services. After passage of the 18th Constitutional Amendment, taxation of services now wholly falls within the domain of Provincial governments.

3. Presently, apart from sales tax on the supply and import of goods, Federal excise duty is chargeable on communication (including telecom) services, certain categories of advertisements, insurance services other than life, marine, health and crop, banking services, franchise services and services provided by property developers/promoters, stockbrokers and port/terminal operators. Besides, Provincial sales tax is chargeable on services provided by hotels/clubs/caterers, custom agents, ship chandlers and stevedores, courier services and advertisements on TV & radio. Except franchise services, Federal excise duty and Provincial sales tax on all the aforesaid services is being collected under GST mode with backward and forward cross-crediting (inter-tax adjustment) with Federal sales tax.

4. Tax-to-GDP ratio on account of the said sales taxes has stagnated on lower side although internationally, the standard rate of 17 percent sounds on higher side. The principal reason of lower tax to GDP ratio of sales taxes has been widespread and unbridled concessions and waivers on both local supply and import stages including zero-rating on several categories of domestic supplies, besides non-coverage of the services sector in general.

5. The consultations with tax professional circles have over the passage of time convinced that there is an overdue need to thoroughly reform and revamp the whole existing sales tax system to bring it closer to international standards. The new GST system will change the mindset of the public at large as well as of the tax machinery and will strengthen government’s efforts to formally depart from excise-style of sales taxation on goods and services.

6. The GST Bill, 2010 will replace the present Sales Tax Act, 1990. While the issues of collection and administration of sales tax on services are being separately negotiated with the Provinces in the light of recent NFC award, a provision has been included in the Federal Bill to integrate Provincial sales tax on services with the Federal sales tax on goods as and when the Provinces authorize FBR to collect and administer sales tax on services.

7. Under the new GST law, exemptions have been kept intact in respect of basic food items including wheat, rice, pulses, vegetables, fruits, live animals, meat and poultry etc. Edible oil chargeable to Federal excise duty will remain exempt from GST as before. Exemptions earlier available for philanthropic, charitable, educational, health or scientific research purposes or under international commitments/agreements including grants-in-aid will also continue. Moreover, life saving drugs, books and other printed materials including newspapers and periodicals have been kept exempt.

8. Local consumption of sectors like textile (including carpets), leather, surgical and sports goods has however, been subjected to tax. Similarly, defence stores, stationary items, dairy products, pharmaceuticals (other than lifesaving), agricultural inputs, agricultural machinery and implements, aviation/navigation equipments including ships & aircrafts etc. have also been proposed to be taxed. Acquisition of capital goods will be facilitated through expeditious adjustment/refund of input tax involved therein.

9. GST will be chargeable only on value added component of each stage of the supply chain. Due to the provision for set-off of the tax paid at earlier stages in the chain, net tax incidence remains as a single stage levy. Due to automatic input tax adjustment facility, businesses are attracted towards voluntary registration so that they may avail such adjustments and improve their cash flows. For this reason, GST always promotes documentation and encourages self-compliance.

10. Other salient features of the new GST system are as follows.

• GST will replace the existing regimes of sales tax and excises on services.
• GST will apply on both at import and local supply stages.
• Standard rate of 15% has been proposed instead of the present rate of 17% or multiple other rates going upto 25%.
• There shall be no fixed tax, reduced tax, enhanced tax, retail price-based tax or special tax scheme under the new GST system.
• A uniform enhanced annual exemption threshold of Rs.7.5 million (which is presently Rs. 5 million) shall be applied to keep small businesses including small traders/retailers/cottage industry out of mandatory tax compliance.
• All exports shall be zero-rated.
• Input tax adjustment of both direct and indirect constituents shall be allowed on “totals” basis (excluding entertainment and non-business use passenger vehicles).
• Sales tax on goods and services where so authorized by the Provinces shall be mutually adjustable so that double taxation does not occur.
• No general zero-rating shall be admissible on any commercial form of domestic supply or on any local consumption.
• The GST system will work purely on “self-assessment and self-policing” basis.
• Cash flow of businesses shall be facilitated through expeditious centralized (Electronic) refund payment system.
• Tax compliance shall be encouraged through transparent and fair audit system with increased use of modern information technology.
• Adjudication, appeal and alternative dispute resolution (ADR) systems have been provided as before.
• FBR will issue simplified rules to regulate the GST procedures and processes.
• The GST Bill 2010 shall take effect from such date as may be notified by the Federal government.
• The new GST system will be applied in FATA/PATA, the Province of Gilgit-Baltistan and AJ&K in due course.

11. The proposed GST system will certainly not generate any sudden increase in revenue yield. It will however, increase the overall tax-to-GDP ratio from the present below 10% to about 12% in next 3-5 years. Pakistan has a strong potential to implement such value added tax type sales tax because of the reason that besides having a properly-reformed collection infrastructure, it has a long-operating sales tax system and substantial hidden sales taxation on inputs of exempt outputs (exempt supplies are input taxed) is already being borne in the aggregate national consumption.

12. The proposed GST system is expected to operate without any serious inflationary impact. It will rather promote economic equity and enable the country to direct national resources towards more productive goals of national development. Reformed GST is also likely to progressively minimize the grey component of the national economy and facilitate fair income redistribution. It will eventually cast healthy impact on income tax receipts and enhance fool-proof tax culture in the country.

---------- Post added at 06:20 PM ---------- Previous post was at 06:19 PM ----------

Opposition to RGST

THAT the Reformed General Sales Tax and the flood surcharge on incomes are inadequate responses to the country`s revenue crisis is relatively clear. For significant, long-term results, the tax structure will have to undergo fundamental reform.
However, issues such as tax reform lie at the cross-section of politics and economics. What makes economic sense is often undermined by political opportunism. It is difficult to avoid the conclusion that the opposition in parliament to the RGST and the `flood tax` is based on rank political opportunism. Consider the position of the PML-N.
The RGST is not a new issue: it has been on the agenda since Pakistan entered a stand-by agreement with the IMF in 2008 and has certainly been the focus of debate for much of this year. As the provinces and the center have tussled over various parts of the sales-tax regime, the PML-N-led government in Punjab has evinced no fundamental opposition to the very idea of RGST. But now that the bill has been tabled in parliament, the PML-N is suddenly vowing to oppose the RGST tooth and nail.

To disagree over a particular tax is the democratic right of Pakistanis, and the PML-N, with its trader base of voters, has many reasons to protect its voters`, and therefore its own, interests. But disagreement while presenting alternatives is one thing; disagreeing for the sake of scoring political points while the country is faced with a grave financial crisis is quite another.
Talk of imposing tax on agriculture or catching tax cheats is well and good, but then why doesn`t the PML-N use its muscle in the Punjab Assembly to impose new taxes on rich landlords? One of the key factors driving up the overall fiscal deficit of the center and the provinces is that the provinces have routinely missed their own revenue targets. If the RGST is something the PML-N (or the MQM for that matter) cannot support in any circumstances, why doesn`t the party take the lead through the provincial assembly it does control to demonstrate what other revenue-generating measures are possible?

Ultimately, the failure of the state to raise enough taxes to meet its necessary expenditures is a failure of all political parties and governments, civilian and military, to date.
As Finance Minister Hafeez Sheikh remonstrated with senators on Monday, virtually every sector that could be taxed has some influence in parliament, meaning that any and every tax mooted is opposed by someone or the other. But Pakistan is undergoing an extraordinary and prolonged financial and economic crisis. For once, politicians of all stripes need to rise above partisan politics.

Editorial Dawn Newspaper
November 24,2010
 
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yeah elite Pakistanis are not over taxed but poor are.

do you know that a normal hotel in Islamabad charges 18% GST per Rs100 for food
 
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What you need to know about RGST.


The Reformed General Sales Tax (RGST) Bill has become the latest ground for political games. While the Pakistan People’s Party (PPP) calls it a necessity, almost all parties are in strong opposition. Amidst the political rhetoric, economic experts are siding with the proposed taxation system and the public is flinching at the thought of yet another price hike.

What is the RGST? Why is it suddenly so important? Is it really as evil as they say?

Here are a few answers.

What is the RGST?

The RGST is actually plain old Value Added Tax (VAT) with a new name. Since the VAT has already had its fill of bad publicity, the government decided it would be a smart move to rename and repackage the new taxation system.

The RGST is a taxation system that operates by an addition of 15 per cent tax on each and every value addition on taxable products.

Who is involved?


The key players behind the proposed RGST are the International Monetary Fund (IMF), the World Bank, United States Mission to the European Union (USEU) and other assorted donors who are tired of paying their taxpayers money to cover up for the leaks in our taxation system. But this is not to say that we do not need reforms in our taxation system. The International Monetary Organisations might be the catalysts towards the reforms just now, but in all reality, tax reforms have been long overdue.

Those who will be affected in one way or other are the suppliers, the manufacturers and the retailers who will all have to maintain and disclose proper sales and production records and would thus find tax evasion pretty difficult. Of course, the real victims are the consumers who would bear the burden of higher costs.

Why implement the RGST?

The government is trying its best to impose the RGST mostly because there is no way out of it this time.

The imposition of more taxes is a condition to which the IMF had agreed to give a monetary injection to the failing economy of the country. Add flood related damage to the economy and conditions of the donor countries, and the imposition of the new tax has become a must.

Although the RGST is being imposed under pressure, economic experts say that Pakistan was in dire need of it. The new system of taxes will not only raise our revenue but also help in documenting the economic growth.

When will RGST be implemented?

The originally proposed VAT was supposed to come in effect back in July, but due to massive public and political backlash, the government was forced to delay the imposition.

Now, the RGST Bill has been passed by the Senate. Eventually, it will be discussed in the Parliament and will be passed unless rejected through a vote. The government needs just a simple majority to pass the Bill. As soon as is passed by the Parliament, the RGST will be imposed.

How will it impact you?

The new tax does have a wider reach than the old GST. When the RGST is imposed, everyone from the suppliers to the middleman in small and large businesses will be brought within the tax net.

Unlike the old GST, the RGST will not be imposed just on the final price of a product; rather, a certain amount of tax will be added at each stage of production.

For example if a supplier sells raw material worth Rs100 to a manufacturer, he would charge Rs115 instead of Rs100, and remit the extra Rs15 as tax.

After manufacturing the product, the manufacturer, for example, adds a profit of Rs2o. The product now costs Rs135, but instead of selling it to the retailer at Rs135, the manufacturer will add another 15 per cent to the value addition of Rs20 which will bring up the cost to Rs138. The extra Rs3 will be remitted as tax.

Finally, the retailer will add his profit. Assuming that is another Rs20, the price of the product is now up to Rs158 again. Instead of selling it at Rs158, the retailer will add yet another 15 per cent of the value addition and the final cost will be Rs161. The retailer will then pay the added tax back to the treasury.

There are exemptions and conditions, but so far the glitches are being worked out. According to economic experts, this system of taxation will help bring more people into the tax net. Not just that, tax evasion will become more and more difficult. Since everyone will be documenting and paying the tax at each level, any attempt at tax evasion will automatically be highlighted.

Source:
http://blogs.tribune.com.pk/story/31...ow-about-rgst/
 
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22112010-cartoon.jpg


Need i say more?
 
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I agree with the Finance Minister on this. He is right in saying that the protests over RGST are basically an attempt to save the rich using the name of the poor. Though i'm not good in economics, the people i ve talked to on this issue claim the reformed bill will curb tax evasion and that's why all the hoopla.

Politically, i think MQM and PML-N's votebank is industrial & trade-based and thus they resist it vehemently while pushing for agricultural tax [which is the main voteforce of the PPP].
 
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If the taxes are properly collect then current percentage is more than enough and infact we will end up with a surplus to spend..the problem is Pakistanis feudal lords like nawaz and zardari who are blatantly paying few thousand rupees tax over several billion rupees worth of assets. Not only its shameful but a cruel joke with the nation..and squeezes odinary businessmen to take their business to somewhere more favorable..dubai, bahrain and now qatar are destinations of choice.
 
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Tax us ... we deserve it ... a few days ago i passed through The Mall Road in Lahore on my way to Ferozsons book shop . There i saw a small camp organised by PTI against corruption and inflation . There were hardly 200 people there chanting slogans . My brother who lives in England was with me and he responded ' i think our people are happy with corruption and inflation, look they are going about their usual business and a handful of people arwe protesting... we deserve Zardari and Nawaz' ... I thought to myself am i then one of the only few who have difficulty in making ends meet or is there someone else as well ?
 
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If the taxes are properly collect then current percentage is more than enough and infact we will end up with a surplus to spend..the problem is Pakistanis feudal lords like nawaz and zardari who are blatantly paying few thousand rupees tax over several billion rupees worth of assets. Not only its shameful but a cruel joke with the nation..and squeezes odinary businessmen to take their business to somewhere more favorable..dubai, bahrain and now qatar are destinations of choice.

:tup:

Exactly.

Ask the CBR how many small businesses they receive remits from? many just return their annual self assessment as "nil" anyway.

VAT is a great concept but perhaps they should consider some relief measures to reduce cost of consumables, then consider RGST. RGST in itself is not a bad thing, it's implementation and practice is what has the overburden tax payer quaking in his or her boots.
 
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Who’s afraid of the RGST?

Opposition to the reformed general sales tax (RGST) is so opportunistic that I can feel it right here in Colombo, the venue for the launch of an Open Budget Index for South Asia.

Had the silly economic team and its pompous predecessors been more open about their intentions, they would not have to contend with the unintended consequences being witnessed now.

First, it forgot the adage that an old tax is no tax. The name change from ‘GST’ to ‘RGST’ signalled to the inflation-stricken folks that a new indirect tax was being imposed. The fact that it is the same old tax with a reduced rate and exemptions for items of common consumption has been of no consequence.

Instead, trade leaders, fearing documentation of the major sectors now included, have been selling the fantasy that the rate will in effect be higher than before.

Secondly, the team did not do a good job of convincing the main ruling party, the PPP, which seems ill-prepared, if not divided, on the issue. The allies were completely ignored. It was taken for granted that by allowing the agreement with the IMF, the ruling alliance was behind the proposal.

Interestingly, all parties agree that the tax-to-GDP ratio needs to go up from its abysmally low level.

Each of them, however, wants to tax the vote bank of the other party.

The main opposition party, the PML-N, had introduced the sales tax in 1990. Ask Sartaj Aziz and Hafiz Pasha, the then economic team, if there was ever any doubt that it would eventually become a full VAT.

As a matter of fact, the army had been mobilised to make the aborted attempt to bring retailers into the tax net. (The army was called out in Wapda as well, such was the love of khaki then!)

With an eye on the next election, the party is now representing its army of traders. As an alternative to the RGST, the party proposes an end to corruption: meaning, get Zardari.

Revenue is needed now and getting the Zardaris of the world can be an unending process, made no easier by Nawaz’s Ehtesab Bureau, Musharraf’s NAB and now judicial activism and media particularism. If anything, the documentation caused by the implementation of the GST will reduce corruption in tax collection in general.

The next major party in opposition, the PML-Q, says that taxing the already overburdened population in such bad times is not a good idea. It conveniently forgets that it failed to introduce a full VAT when, according to its own claims, the economy was booming. It was not then so much an IMF idea.

Insaaf, Jamaat and other parties outside parliament are one in suggesting that more revenue means more money for corrupt use by present rulers. Does this mean they support the RGST but only when they come into power? No, the whole idea is dismissed as IMF dictation.

Allies of the PPP have all gone their own ways. The MQM, which holds the balance for a simple majority, has been opposing flood tax on urban properties to protect its own vote bank and proposing land reform affecting the PPP and some Muslim League factions. It is now one with businesses in Karachi in opposing the RGST and proposing the alternative of taxing agricultural incomes.

The Maulana of Dera Ismail Khan is upping the ante and is succeeding, as always, RGST or no RGST. After securing a good deal in and out of the NFC transfers and foreign assistance, the ANP hedged its bet and formed a committee. The vibes from the statement of its leader Senator Bilour are not very encouraging, though.

And let’s not forget that the whole delay so far was caused by differences with the provinces. These remain unresolved. Even if the National Assembly passes the bill, the provincial assemblies may not follow suit.

So who is supporting the RGST, other than the silly economic team?

Who?s afraid of the RGST? – The Express Tribune
 
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