Skip to main content

Advertisement

Advertisement

Business

Pakistanis squeezed by inflation face more pain from tax hikes

Pakistanis squeezed by inflation face more pain from tax hikes

FILE PHOTO: Vendors arrange vegetable baskets while waiting for customers at a makeshift stall along a market in Karachi, Pakistan June 11, 2021. REUTERS/Akhtar Soomro

ISLAMABAD : When Pakistan's annual inflation rate hit 11.5per cent in November, the statistics office put a number on a phenomenon that was already painfully clear to the poor and the salaried middle-class voters who carried Prime Minister Imran Khan to power three years ago.

Now the government is preparing to double down on the pain with a belt-tightening budget of tax hikes and spending cuts required to release a US$1 billion tranche of International Monetary Fund bailout cash.

"I never thought it would become so difficult to survive," said Sibte Hasan, a 43-year-old construction supervisor from Pakistan's second-biggest city Lahore.

As consumer price inflation has accelerated into double digits, with staples like flour, sugar, oil and rice doubling in price over recent months, the Pakistani rupee has fallen around 14per cent since May to reach a historic low.

Government officials are expected to release official figures this week when it presents a special supplementary budget to cabinet.

But already it is clear that a raft of sales tax exemptions will be scrapped and new levies will be raised on fuel as well as some imported goods.

The IMF agreed last month to revive a stalled US$6 billion funding programme launched in 2019 but demanded further fiscal measures as part of a broader structural reforms package covering areas from the power sector debt to corporate governance, climate change and trade policy.

Last month the central bank also tightened the screws, raising its key interest rate by 150 basis points to 8.75per cent to try to stem surging inflation, a slide in the Pakistani rupee and a current account deficit that has widened to US$5.2 billion (July-Oct), and trade deficit to US$20.59 billion (July-Nov).

Government officials have put a brave face on the situation, saying that the impact on the poorest will be softened by welfare cushions and pointing to progress in addressing Pakistan's chronic tax collection problem.

"Prudent fiscal reforms have helped in improving the tax-to-GDP ratio and improving revenue generation," Finance Adviser Shaukat Tarin told a conference last week.

The government has also had some relief from the immediate pressure on public finances with a US$3 billion loan from Saudi Arabia that arrived this month.

FALLING PRODUCTION

However, whether the fiscal measures will be enough to stabilise public finances sufficiently to allow the government to address Pakistan's underlying economic problems remains unclear.

While consumers have faced higher household bills, the impact has also been felt in the business sector through high energy prices and raw materials costs as well as the recent sharp rise in interest rates.

"Our production is falling rapidly," said textile mill owner Sheikh Muhammad Akbar. "My unit is not generating its targeted production because of expensive raw materials and high production costs," he told Reuters.

Pakistan's debt-bound economy has long been hobbled by problems ranging from a wasteful and inefficient power sector to weak tax collection, poor productivity and minimal value added exports.

But loose monetary policy and an over valued exchange rate papered over some of the problems, helping the economy rebound from the coronavirus slowdown to grow 3.9per cent last year, even while the fiscal and current account deficits widened, threatening the stability of public finances.

(Writing by Asif Shahzad; Additional Reporting by Syed Raza Hasan in Karachi and Mubasher Bukhari in Lahore, Editing by Angus MacSwan)

Source: Reuters

Advertisement

Also worth reading

Advertisement