Bye bye Pakola!

An old gem being strangled to death, thanks to a failed policy which drowned a few industries back in the early 90s, and threatens to do the same again.](http://tribune.com.pk/story/584777/bleeding-green-pakola-fizzles-out-as-capacity-tax-reintroduced/)
Bleeding green: Pakola fizzles out as capacity tax reintroduced

http://i1.tribune.com.pk/wp-content/uploads/2013/07/584777-pakcola-1375293880-504-640x480.jpg

Retail and wholesale shops have started to feel shortage of Pakola, which usually sees growth in sales during in the month of Ramazan.

**KARACHI: **After more than 60 years, production of locally made soft-drink Pakola may come to an end as the government reintroduces the infamous capacity tax, which is blamed for devastating Pakistani beverage makers in the early 1990s, industry officials told The Express Tribune.

“Production and distribution of all the bottles, including 300 millilitres and 1.5 litres, has stopped,” said Qamar Pervez, a marketing manager at Mehran Bottlers, which owns Pakola along with brands like Bubble Up, Apple Sidra and Double Cola.
“We are only supplying the product in cans. We can’t afford the risk because of the nature of this tax. What if we go to court, lose, and the tax is implemented? Who is going to pay the penalty then?” asked Pervez. The company markets the cans mostly in foreign markets.

Pervez didn’t say when exactly production was stopped and couldn’t confirm if it was a permanent decision. Managing Director for the company Zeeshan Habib wasn’t immediately available to comment.
The government imposed a capacity tax on the manufacturers of aerated waters in Budget 2013-14. This basically means companies will pay sales tax and federal excise duty on production potential of the machinery instead of actual output.
The tax ranges from Rs1.17 million per valve to Rs4.7 million per valve. The valve is the nozzle of the machine used to fill bottles.
Some local beverage makers have already taken stay orders from courts to stop government from enforcing the tax, industry official said.
However some claim there is an uglier side to this story. Industry members say owners of local beverage companies have thrived on tax evasion.
“They pay sales tax on one truck instead of the three which leave the factory gates. Then they complain they aren’t doing well,” said a businessman affiliated with Lahore Chamber of Commerce and Industry.
Small vs multinationals
The capacity tax was first introduced in 1991 during Nawaz Sharif’s first government. The industry was made to pay Rs650,000 per valve until the decision was revoked in 1994. But by then the damage had already been done.

“Many companies had to shut down factories because of that tax. Until the early 1990s, local beverage companies had 40% market share while the rest was controlled by multinationals. After a few years, we only had a 10% share,” said an industry official who requested anonymity since his company is involved in litigation.
Although multinational firms will end up paying the most because of the size of their factories, they are in a much better position to afford such a hit, claim local producers. Everything comes down to efficiency of the machine and demand for the product in market.
“If they have the latest machine, and mine is 20 years old, how can you compare the two when the owner of the new efficient machine can easily produce more?”
When capacity tax was imposed for the first time in 1990s, the multinational beverage giants had to pay phenomenal amounts in freight to airlift the heavy machinery to Pakistan. The new machines were imported in a matter of days.
There is the problem of power breakdowns and the law and order situation, which often reduces the working hours. “The big company has the muscle to pay all but we can’t,” said the official.
Local producers warn that the shutdown of local manufactures will give multinationals a commanding edge in the ‘price war’
“They are not vying to get the competition. It’s a price war instead. If they sell a bottle for Rs75 instead of Rs85, it’s because we are there in the market selling our product at Rs65. This is what they want to eliminate,” said the industry official.
Retail and wholesale shops have started to feel shortage of Pakola, which usually sees growth in sales during in the month of Ramazan. Consumers and industry members reacted strongly to the news, which has already been doing rounds on the social media.

Re: Bye bye Pakola!

:(

Re: Bye bye Pakola!

I have seen this Pakola ice cream soda is sold in Pennsylvania, New Jersey, New York and perhaps all over other states where there is Indian/Pakistani grocery stores. It seems that this drink is a great source of earning foreign exchange to Pakistan, will be lost if the factory is closed in Karachi.

AH and his mqm gets millions of bhatta from such businesses should come forward and ask Sharif Brathern to reconsider this decision.

Re: Bye bye Pakola!

Sad... only of my cherished childhood memories. :(

Only if businesses paid proper income taxes, governments wouldn't have to impose such stupid ideas. I am sure Pepsi and Coke get away with bribing tax officials.

Re: Bye bye Pakola!

:no:

Re: Bye bye Pakola!

Nooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo

I <3 the green Pakola (ice cream soda), raspberry Pakola, and Apple Sidra :teary2:

Re: Bye bye Pakola!

I think in calgary shortage of pakola has already started. mY be thats why i couldnt find any in 3 desi grocery stores last weekend.

anyone knows when Sharifola offical launch is?

Re: Bye bye Pakola!

Though this is not directly about Pakola, its indirectly related to the capacity tax. PML-N member and owner of a beverage company comes up with a novel way of avoiding the tax. I guess he has learnt from the best.
Man appears in LHC as chief of FBR to save his boss - thenews.com.pk

**ISLAMABAD: In an unprecedented case of impersonation, a Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz leader and a leading industrialist of the country have been caught red handed making fool of the Lahore High Court (LHC) in a high profile tax case.

One of employees of the industrialist was presented before the court as Chief Excise of the Federal Board of Revenue (FBR) to distract the court from handing down a judgment against the imposition of capacity tax on the beverage industry, LHC documents available with The News reveal.

None other than the LHC itself caught Punjab Beverages (Pvt) Company Limited of making mockery of the judiciary as its director Finance appeared before the LHC as Chief Excise FBR on 19-07-2013 and told the court that he was Chief FBR and he would not initiate any recovery against the beverage companies under Federal Excise and Sales Tax on production capacity (Aerated waters) Rules, 2013 as he is bound by law to collect the capacity tax only.

It is being described as a major case which can send a PML-N leader behind the bars. Some analysts describe this case as an example of the difference between corruption of other political parties and corruption of industrialists.

In this case, first an SRO was issued in favour of powerful beverage industrialists and when there was chance that LHC would strike it down, the industrialists didn’t bother to respect the court and law and cheated the honourable LHC to save their billions which would be minted in the garb of capacity tax.

It was revealed before the court that Chief FBR, Dr Ashfaq Ahmad Tunio, never appeared before the LHC in Capacity tax cases on beverage industry and the person who impersonated as Chief FBR was Fayyaz Hussain, Director Finance Punjab Beverage (Pvt) Company Limited.

Court documents say that Dr Ashfaq Ahmad Tunio, Chief FBR himself told the LHC that he was in Islamabad on 19-07-2013. Outraged over the revelation, the LHC has summoned the CEO Punjab Beverages, Fayyaz Hussain who impersonated as Chief FBR before the court, and a court clerk (Munshi) who was found chatting with Fayyaz on the last date of hearing when Fayyaz made mockery of the court.

Well-placed sources told The News that owner of Punjab Beverages Co. (Pvt) Ltd along with three other bottling plants of a known multinational brand in Faisalabad, Gujranwala, Multan and Islamabad, having close acquaintance with the PML-N were in the forefront and lobbied for imposition of capacity tax on the beverage industry instead of tax on the actual production.

It has been learnt that a few powerful gurus of beverage industry had held several meetings with FBR officials before getting issued an SRO of their choice despite strong opposition from the small bottlers.

The SRO was challenged in the LHC by one M/S Pakistan Fruit Juice Co. (Pvt) Ltd and Amrat Beverages Ltd. On 19 July 2013 Muhammad Ilyas Ahmed Khan, Advocate along with Fayyaz Hussain of Punjab beverages impersonating as Ashfaq Ahmed Tunio, Chief Excise appeared in the court and submitted that the FBR would not initiate any recovery against the petitioner.

LHC later shockingly discovered that the person who appeared in the court as Ashfaq Ahmed Tunio, Chief Excise FBR was Mr Fayyaz Hussain who happens to be an employee of Punjab Beverage Co. (Pvt) Ltd owned by an ex PML-N Senator from Faisalabad.

Justice Syed Mansoor Ali Shah has ordered the Regional Police Officer Faisalabad to ensure the presence of Fayyaz Hussain and the CEO of Punjab Beverage Co. in the court on the next date of hearing, who portrayed as the Chief of Excise in front of the court and tried to cheat the judge and made mockery of the judiciary.

A court clerk (Munshi) namely Habib of a leading law firm of Lahore has also been summoned because he was seen chatting with the accused Fayyaz Hussain on July 19. The judge has also called IIlyas Ahmed Khan, Advocate and has summoned the Chairman FBR along with Ahfaq Ahmed Tunio on the next date of hearing. Such an incident is unprecedented in the history of Lahore High Court.
**

Re: Bye bye Pakola!

Pakola, the leading local soda beverage in Pakistan, announced that it has decided to curtail the ‘only’ Pakistani beverage due to the infamous capacity tax imposed recently on manufacturers of glass bottles forcing them to lower their production, an English daily newspaper reported on August 1.

The new budget imposed heavy taxation on factories in the form of capacity tax. This directly affected the manufacturing cost of glass bottles, which rose considerably, leading Pakola to stop its production. The date has not been given out yet.

Representatives of Mehran Bottlers, who own, produce and package Pakola along with Bubble Up, Apple Sidra and Double Cola, narrated that the estimated tax would vary between Rs.1.17 million to 4.7 million per valve (Valve is the nozzle from which the bottles are filled) if they choose to continue producing glass bottles.

Production of 300 millilitres and 1.5 litres is currently at a standstill, Qamar Pervez, a marketing manager at Mehran Bottlers confirmed.

“We are only supplying the product in cans,” Pervez further stated.

Source: No capacity for Pakola’s glass bottles in capacity tax

Re: Bye bye Pakola!

wow, look at him, throw the idiot behind the bars, and also his boss the senator. who is this senator by the way? if you know his name by any chance?

Re: Bye bye Pakola!

Ok so can't they go to recyclable food grade plastic or PET or something? Is glass useage the main issue?
Gosh does Ittefaq want more glass from the market hence they don't want beverage makers using glass bottles...

so in turn the glass bottling industry would also be a victim here...

Nooraaaas!!!!

Re: Bye bye Pakola!

Its not about glass bottles. It is about the nature of the tax. Capacity tax is imposed on the production capacity of a beverage plant, as opposed to its production. Foreign beverages win, because their production capacities tend to be more or less fully utilized, because of the pepsi/coke craze in our country (punjab beverages makes pepsi). Local brands such as Pakola suffer, because while they may have enough spiggots, they cannot afford to produce at peak all the time, as their sales are significantly less. Hence, they end up paying taxes for stuff they are not even producing or selling.

Its more like a flip of how our IPPs are paid based on production capacity, as opposed to actual production. Issue is, that in case of beverages, many politicians have stakes in Pepsi/coke, hence they are ok with the imposition of this tax. (In a worst case scenario, they can always make their finance manager pretend to be the FBR chairman and go to court on their behalf)., And in case of IPPs, since they are on the receiving end of the payments, they again want the capacity payment structure. A win-win for politicians.

Re: Bye bye Pakola!

oh yaar thora sa bhatta de do Nawaz Sharif ko aur Pakola will live another 5 years :chai:

Re: Bye bye Pakola!

thora sa bhatta, how many billions, 15 to 20 billions o.k.? It only transpired to 1500 to 2000 khokhay, chosa aam ke nahin:)

Re: Bye bye Pakola!

read post #9.

Re: Bye bye Pakola!

That is "thora sa" for them, should be able to give them (Pakolas) life for another 5 years.

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Rule number one of running a country: Tax stuff from other countries, not from your own country, so your stuff sells more.

Nawaz needs to go back to school. Wait did he EVER go to school? Jeez.

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So, by this tax, Nawaz and other stakeholders in a foreign product, Pepsi, get to make more money. Who is letting these ***** run the country?? Will you people quit voting for these crapolas?

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Pakola establishment is in Karachi Sindh. Sindh did not vote for Nawaz. He lost miserably in Sindh.