Taxes paid by Pakistani Politicians

Re: Taxes paid by Pakistani Politicians

The salaries they earn are around 2-3 lacs, this is only the salary. You can add on top of this corruptions worth crores, most of the parliamentarians are feudals or industrialists.

Re: Taxes paid by Pakistani Politicians

Azad Adliya,establishment and army must've stoped Mr Prezident and other baycharas from filling tax.
and yes ZAB wanted it to be that way

Re: Taxes paid by Pakistani Politicians

Their salaries are secondary, as taxes are deducted at source from their 'sarkari' salaries. Its the businesses and mills and lands and factories that these people "dont" own, on which they "dont" pay taxes.

Re: Taxes paid by Pakistani Politicians

ideally all their incomes should be on one NTN, and hence the tax returns.

PMLN is not happy,was watching a program in which Kh Asif and Ishaq Dar were voicing anger. And on Dawn New Omar Sohail Zia Butt was claiming that his father pays his expenses.

Re: Taxes paid by Pakistani Politicians

tsk tsk tsk

Re: Taxes paid by Pakistani Politicians

Does the NA members receive pay after tax or before tax?

for example I have savings account with Meezan bank from couple of years, every month bank automatically cut withholding tax from my monthly profit which gets to six figure every year but I never filed taxes so am I a tax-chor?

I have shares on my name in business and we do pay taxes granted they are far less then should the company pay the ratio would be 100 to 5 but I never return or them so again am I tax chor?

Re: Taxes paid by Pakistani Politicians

You are not a tax chor but you are required to file a tax return if you are a resident Pakistani (a separate statement if as it seems in your case the income is entirely subject to deduction at source). It seems unlikely though, that the politicians fall into the exempted category. I wonder if they can afford the houses and cars they own through only salary being member of NA.

http://download1.fbr.gov.pk/Docs/201211891140588ObligationtoFileIncomeTaxDeclaration.pdf

Re: Taxes paid by Pakistani Politicians

Some other notorious tax chores
ie
Imran Khan spending billions on his dirty politics and life style but
Imran Khan evaded tax all his life, talks of ending corruption in 90 days’

Another Chore of Thug Party
**who is another tax evader… **
****ABRAR UL HAQ…

**
http://tribune.com.pk/story/463588/c…fbrs-hit-list/**

Everyone in PTI looks Tax Chore

Re: Taxes paid by Pakistani Politicians

Look at ch nisars tax statement, if he has proof against Imran khan he should go to court and have him convicted from there. Giving wild press conferences won't help him.

Re: Taxes paid by Pakistani Politicians

Imran Khan paid Rs 18 lakh tax and Nawaz Sharif Rs 25 lakh

Thanks to Imran Khan, at least Nawaz Sharif's tax payment improved from Rs 3000 (2008) - Rs 25 Lakh (2011) :)

Nawaz Sharif's actual income is at least 100 times more than Imran but not much differences in taxes paid.

Jahangir Tareen who gets criticised by many paid Rs 1.7 crore tax and looks like it's more than Sharif family combined.

Also salute to Aitzaz Ahsan for at least paying proper taxes Rs 1.2 crore (I think).

In my opinion, this issue is FAR more serious than "Fake degree" or "Dual Nationality" so there MUST be some action taken against tax evaders let it be Javed Hashmi, Imran Khan, Zardari, Sharifs or others. If these people don't take income tax seriously then don't ever blame the rest because hardly anyone pays taxes voluntarily, you need laws and their strict implementation, audit system in place. But how can tax evaders force others to pay taxes?

Re: Taxes paid by Pakistani Politicians

and everyone in PPP is an angel, poori baat bola karayn yaar.

Re: Taxes paid by Pakistani Politicians

Pakistan politicians engulfed by tax evasion storm | World news | guardian.co.uk

Nearly 70% of Pakistan’s politicians, including some of the country’s wealthiest people, did not file tax returns last year, according to a report that shines a light on a longstanding problem that reaches to the top of society.

According to an investigation published on Wednesday, the vast majority of MPs, cabinet ministers and Pakistan’s famously affluent president, Asif Ali Zardari, have not paid tax owed to the desperately cash-strapped government.

The report, by the Centre for Investigative Reporting and the Centre for Peace and Development Initiatives, comes at time of deepening economic crisis in a country that collects just 9% of its national wealth in tax – almost matching Afghanistan as one of the lowest rates in the world.

Tax dodging is rife among Pakistan’s 180 million population; just 2% are registered within the tax system but fewer actually pay it. Critics say the rich and powerful are some of the worst offenders and are effectively subsidised by the poor.

“Those who make revenue policies, run the government and collect taxes have not been able to set good examples for others,” says the Representation Without Taxation report. It found 69% of national assembly members and 63% of senate members did not file tax returns in 2011. Although they are automatically taxed on their basic state salary, by failing to declare any additional wealth they would have been able to evade paying tax.

According to a 2009 study, the average wealth of a member of the national assembly was well over £500,000. Under Pakistani law, tax must be paid on income in excess of £3,200. With little revenue to support the national budget, the government has been forced to borrow huge amounts from its banks. Many analysts fear Pakistan’s threadbare public finances are unsustainable and yet another bailout by foreign donors could be imminent.

The latest research, led by journalist Umar Cheema, is based on the personal tax numbers politicians must include on their nomination papers when standing for election. The figures were used to track down tax filings, most of which were unofficially divulged by staff within the federal board of revenue. Just two politicians voluntarily replied to researchers asking for their tax details, the report says.

According to the report, 73 members of the national assembly did not even have a personal tax number at the time of the last election in 2008.

In the current cabinet of 55 ministers, only 21 filed tax returns, the report alleged, and those who were taxed paid very little, with only 9% of national assembly members paying more than $6,400 (£4,000). Mushahid Hussain Sayed, a member of the senate, paid just 82 rupees – about 50p.

In an email to Reuters, Sayed disputed the report, saying he had paid $6. “I was not a senator then; my source of support was from my family’s agricultural income and lecture honoraria,” he said.

Zardari did not file a tax return in 2011, according to the database of Pakistan’s tax collectors, although the report said his spokesman insisted he had.

Many parliamentarians are feudal landlords who own vast estates giving them huge incomes and armies of workers who vote for them. However, income from agricultural production is tax exempt.

The government plans to launch an amnesty allowing tax evaders to register their untaxed wealth by paying a flat penalty of up to £380. Although it will cost the state millions of pounds in lost revenue, officials think it will reel more people into the tax net.

Pakistan has long struggled with tax evasion by the rich and powerful. In a 1986 speech, Zia-ul-Haq, the former military dictator, said if Islamic law called for the amputation of the hands of thieves, tax evaders should have their entire arm cut off. But, as the report notes, Zia failed to file a tax return between 1960 and 1988.

Re: Taxes paid by Pakistani Politicians

In Pakistan, new tax chief plans to get evaders to pay up - latimes.com

By Alex Rodriguez, Los Angeles Times
December 13, 2012, 4:53 p.m.
ISLAMABAD, Pakistan — The man hired to go after a nation of tax evaders jabs his finger at his laptop screen as he scrolls through a database of wealthy Pakistanis and dissects their spending habits.

He stops at the name of a rich man from Peshawar.

Everything’s there, Ali Arshad Hakeem says: the man’s photo, his home in a posh Peshawar neighborhood, his frequent trips to Abu Dhabi, his BMW and a bevy of bank accounts.

“We have the universe; now how do we use that universe?” asks Hakeem, Pakistan’s new Federal Board of Revenue chairman. Hakeem answers his own question. “My approach is to give them an offer.”

Hakeem has the Sisyphean task of overhauling Pakistan’s broken income tax system, and he claims to have the remedy. He is asking parliament members — a majority of whom are believed to evade taxes themselves — to approve a national amnesty wiping the slate clean for millions of Pakistanis who have never paid a rupee in taxes, if they agree to a one-time payment of 40,000 rupees, about $420. Then, in 2013, they would have to file a return and pay whatever income tax they owe: for example, about$11,100 on a taxable income of $56,000.

If they ignore the offer, he says, the government will suspend their national identity cards, which are needed to travel abroad, maintain bank accounts and buy or sell property. That penalty probably would apply to people who continue to evade taxes after the amnesty ends, Hakeem’s aides say. He will also disclose the names and assets of tax evaders in newspapers and on the Internet, he says, and he will push for legislation that rewards whistle-blowers who finger tax cheats.

It’s a controversial approach, experts say, and one that critics say provides an easy way out both for individual and corporate tax cheats. Yet it is one that many believe is desperately needed in a country where less than 1% of the population pays income taxes. A host of ills hobble Pakistan, but at the top of the list is the country’s inability to generate tax revenue. Pakistan’s tax collection record is one of the world’s worst. No one has been prosecuted for personal income tax evasion in 15 years, Hakeem said.

With revenue flow at a crawl, the government relies heavily on Western financial aid and bailouts from international lending institutions. Pakistan is due to repay $7.5 billion of what it owes to the International Monetary Fund by 2015, and so far has paid back less than a third of that amount. The government’s overall debt earlier this year stood at about $130 billion, roughly 60% of its GDP.

Pakistan’s reluctance to tackle tax reform hasn’t gone unnoticed by Western leaders, who have warned Islamabad to address the issue or risk losing its lifeline. A Congressional Research Service report released in April cited Pakistan’s 9% tax-to-GDP rate as one of the lowest in the world. “For most observers, this represents what essentially is mass tax evasion by the country’s economic elite,” the report says.

Hakeem, 49, was appointed in July, after a four-year stint as head of the National Database and Registration Authority, the agency that issues the national identity cards. He says his prime target is Pakistan’s moneyed upper crust: owners of sprawling two- and three-story marble-floored homes kept white-glove clean by teams of servants.

Among them are ministers and politicians, the very people responsible for enacting and executing laws aimed at fixing the system. A 2010 study by the Pakistan Institute of Legislative Development and Transparency, an independent think tank, reported the average worth of a Pakistani lawmaker to be about $850,000, while the richest lawmaker’s assets topped $34 million.

According to a study released Wednesday by Pakistani investigative journalist Umar Cheema, two-thirds of Pakistan’s federal lawmakers and more than 60% of the Cabinet did not file income tax returns in 2011. One senator, Mushahid Hussain Sayed, paid less than $1 in income taxes in 2011, Cheema says. The report also says President Asif Ali Zardari did not file an income tax return last year, though it adds that an aide said the president did file a return.

“The problem starts at the top,” the report states. “Those who make revenue policies, run the government and collect taxes have not been able to set good examples for others.”

To track down cheats, Hakeem and his team of young computer experts have combed a variety of national databases to form individual spending and income profiles. One of those experts and a top aide to Hakeem, Samad Khurram, says previous tax amnesties in Pakistan failed because the government had no idea who the tax evaders were.

“Now we know them, their children, their wives, where they travel, what cars they use,” Khurram says. “We’re saying, ‘We know you, we’re coming after you, and if you don’t pay, we do this….’ That’s not an amnesty — that’s a threat.”

Hakeem’s goal is to raise the number of registered taxpayers to 3.7 million from 768,000 in the next few months. Pakistan’s national election, slated for spring, is forcing him to move fast. He was appointed by Zardari, and if the president’s ruling Pakistan People’s Party is ousted by voters, a new government could step in and shelve his plan.

“That is a curveball,” Hakeem says of the election’s timing. “My horizon is limited, so I want to bring these things quickly… I’m going to turn this into a very ruthless department.”

Critics of Hakeem’s plan say tax amnesty is far from a ruthless approach. Hafiz Pasha, a leading economic analyst and a former finance minister, says the better way is to muster the political will to prosecute tax evaders, particularly corporate tax cheats, a subset that Pasha says represents a much larger chunk of the potential tax revenue pie than individual taxpayers.

Hakeem’s aides disagree that corporate evaders pose a larger problem and say Hakeem will focus on companies after addressing the problem with individuals.

Pasha contends that Hakeem’s program “will lead to a situation where, in the future, people will say, ‘Why should we pay; we’ll just wait for another amnesty.’ The elite do not pay taxes, and it’s just a way for them to convert what they’ve made over the last few years from black to white.”

Suspending an individual’s national identity card probably won’t hold up in court, Pasha adds, unless government lawyers can prove that the individual is a tax evader.

“The Supreme Court would throw it out in five minutes,” Pasha says. “You can’t violate people’s rights like that. If you have foolproof evidence, confront them. Throw the book at them. But presumed evidence — like the number of times you travel or the number of cars you own — that’s not an indicator of income.”

Hakeem says he has to innovate because the previous approach on tax evaders has been stymied by corruption. Tax collectors and other government officials haven’t initiated cases because wealthy Pakistanis paid them off.

Hakeem says he has fired “quite a few” workers in his agency’s income tax division, but adds, “I can’t fire everyone in the tax collection system. So I’d like to take the other approach — use technology, get the low-hanging fruit, and increase the [tax] base…. Obviously, there will be hiccups. But eventually we will get it right.”

Re: Taxes paid by Pakistani Politicians

After watching a few talkshows on this issue, i am SHOCKED what sort of excuses parliamentarians come up with. Some claim that their parents pay for their expenses and other claim their kids pay for them as they live in joint family system.
Some claim their factories or businesses pay taxes and they own NOTHING except those businesses.
Omar Cheema has actually come under fire from all politicians who instead of defending themselves are asking why are generals not asked this question which is fair enough but shouldn't you talk about yourself first??

Re: Taxes paid by Pakistani Politicians

How much has Ganja bros paid?

Anybody?

Re: Taxes paid by Pakistani Politicians

^^ Nawaz Sharif Rs 25 Lakh (not even 10% of what he should pay but still 1000 times better than Rs 5000 3 yrs ago THANKS TO IMRAN KHAN)

Hamza Shabaz Rs 17 lakh

Shahbaz Sharif - Unknown

Re: Taxes paid by Pakistani Politicians

I think Shahbaz Sharif paid around 25, and Nawaz Sharif 18 lacs or the other way around.

Re: Taxes paid by Pakistani Politicians

^ On monthly income perhaps :cb:

Re: Taxes paid by Pakistani Politicians

88 MPs do not have NTNs - thenews.com.pk
Report unmasks tax evasion among Pakistan leaders

Tax dodgers: PPP** 91, PMLN** 65 , MQM** 18 , ANP** 11, MMA** 7 PTI** 3

************​PPP leading the pack. Pakistan definitely needs a Robin Hood :stuck_out_tongue:

Re: Taxes paid by Pakistani Politicians

Alhamdulillah another revenge by the current parliament.

ECP informed 70pc parliamentarians paid no taxes in 2011 | Pakistan | DAWN.COM