Taxing the rich

Pakistan is a country where salaried class pays taxes, other than that agriculturists, industrialists and big businessmen pay very negligible taxes. How long can a country survive having amongst the lowest GDP to tax ratio?

http://www.nytimes.com/2010/07/19/world/asia/19taxes.html?pagewanted=all

Pakistan’s Elite Pay Few Taxes, Widening GapISLAMABAD, Pakistan — **Much of Pakistan’s capital city looks like a rich Los Angeles suburb. Shiny sport utility vehicles purr down gated driveways. Elegant multistory homes are tended by servants. Laundry is never hung out to dry.

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But behind the opulence lurks a troubling fact. Very few of these households pay income tax. That is mostly because the politicians who make the rules are also the country’s richest citizens, and are skilled at finding ways to exempt themselves.

That would be a problem in any country. But in Pakistan, the lack of a workable tax system feeds something more menacing: a festering inequality in Pakistani society, where the wealth of its most powerful members is never redistributed or put to use for public good. That is creating conditions that have helped spread an insurgency that is tormenting the country and complicating American policy in the region.

It is also a sorry performance for a country that is among the largest recipients of American aid, payments of billions of dollars that prop up the country’s finances and are meant to help its leaders fight the insurgency.

Though the authorities have tried to expand the net in recent years, taxing profits from the stock market and real estate, entire swaths of the economy, like agriculture, a major moneymaker for the elite, remain untaxed.

“This is a system of the elite, by the elite and for the elite,” said Riyaz Hussain Naqvi, a retired government official who worked in tax collection for 38 years. “It is a skewed system in which the poor man subsidizes the rich man.”

The problem starts at the top. The average worth of Pakistani members of Parliament is $900,000, with its richest member topping $37 million, according to a December study by the Pakistan Institute of Legislative Development and Transparency in Islamabad.

While Pakistan’s income from taxes last year was the lowest in the country’s history, according to Zafar ul-Majeed, a senior official in the Federal Board of Revenue, the assets of current members of Parliament nearly doubled from those of members of the previous Parliament, the institute study found.

The country’s top opposition leader, Nawaz Sharif, reported that he paid no personal income tax for three years ending in 2007 in public documents he filed with Pakistan’s election commission. A spokesman for Mr. Sharif, an industrialist who is widely believed to be a millionaire, said he had been in exile and had turned over positions in his companies to relatives.

A month of requests for similar documents for Pakistan’s president and prime minister went unanswered by the commission; representatives for the men said they did not have the figures.
“Taxes are the Achilles’ heel of Pakistani politicians,” said Jahangir Tareen, a businessman and member of Parliament who is trying to put taxes on the public agenda. He paid $225,534 in income tax in 2009, a figure he made public in Parliament last month. “If you don’t have income, fine, but then don’t go and get into a Land Cruiser.”

The rules say that anyone who earns more than $3,488 a year must pay income tax, but few do. Akbar Zaidi, a Karachi-based political economist with the Carnegie Endowment, estimates that as many as 10 million Pakistanis should be paying income tax, far more than the 2.5 million who are registered.

Out of more than 170 million Pakistanis, fewer than 2 percent pay income tax, making Pakistan’s revenue from taxes among the lowest in the world, a notch below Sierra Leone’s as a ratio of tax to gross domestic product.

Mr. Zaidi blames the United States and its perpetual bailouts of Pakistan for the minuscule tax revenues from rich and poor alike. “The Americans should say: ‘Enough. Sort it out yourselves. Get your house in order first,’ ” he argued. “But you are cowards. You are afraid to take that chance.”

Much of the tax avoidance, especially by the wealthy, is legal. Under a 1990s law that has become one of the main tools to legalize undocumented — or illegally obtained — money made in Pakistan, authorities here are not allowed to question money transferred from abroad. Businessmen and politicians channel billions of rupees through Dubai back to Pakistan, no questions asked.
“In this country, no one asks, ‘How did you get that flat in Mayfair?’ ” said Shabbar Zaidi, a partner at A. F. Ferguson & Company, an accounting firm in Karachi, referring to an affluent area of London. “It’s a very good country for the rich man. Chauffeurs, servants, big houses. The question is, who is suffering? The common man.”

Then there are the tax-free goods supposedly meant for Afghanistan. Mr. Zaidi said much stayed in Pakistan illegally, including 50,000 tons of black tea that were imported last year. Afghans drink green tea.

“As per our information, not a single cup of black tea was drunk in Afghanistan,” he said.
Tax collectors try to be tough. When Mr. Naqvi headed the tax authority, he tried to conduct a broad audit, prompting howls of protest. Lawyers from the Lahore High Court Bar Association — also evaders — even issued a ruling against him.

Mr. Majeed said his collectors now use individual electric bills to track down rich evaders, on the assumption that high bills mean air-conditioning, which means wealth. They recently issued hundreds of warnings to rich houses in Islamabad. But going after politicians, he said, is tricky. “Not while they’re in power,” he said, smiling.

Tax collection has risen by about 20 percent a year recently, he said, though it barely registers as an increase because more than half of Pakistan’s economy is off the books.

Lacking the political will to collect income tax, Pakistan resorts to easier measures, like the sales tax, considered less fair because it hits the poor as hard as the rich. Muhamed Azhar, 26, a chauffeur in Karachi with a $123-a-month salary, pays the same sales tax rate as a National Assembly member who makes $1,400 a month with benefits. Earnings from real estate and land are rarely declared.

“The big people ruling us have houses and servants, and they should pay taxes,” Mr. Azhar said, watching motorcades of sport utility vehicles zip by, en route to the local Parliament. He sometimes wonders whether they are even going to work at all. With all the tinted windows, guards and fuss, he has never actually seen them.

The overwhelming majority of Pakistan’s tax burden is carried by the manufacturing sector for the domestic market, which, according to Mr. Majeed, makes up only 19 percent of Pakistan’s economy but pays 51 percent of its taxes.

Most economic activity takes place in the shadows. Merchants — the most vociferous opponents of a value-added tax, a tax the International Monetary Fund has pressed Pakistan to adopt largely because it would require documentation — make up a fifth of the economy, but carry 6 percent of its tax burden. Out of millions of shops in Pakistan, just 160,000 are now registered for a general sales tax, Mr. Majeed said.

Particularly galling for Pakistan’s middle class is the lack of a federal tax on agriculture, an industry that employs nearly half of Pakistan’s population and whose profits go largely to the wealthy landowners who pack local Parliaments. When the World Bank finally forced adoption of a modest provincial tax in 1997 as a condition for a loan, few paid.

Mr. Tareen, the member of Parliament, said that when he first tried to pay, tax collectors refused to take the money, not wanting to rock the boat. He had to write a letter to a senior official to have it accepted.

It was not always like this. Nasir Aslam Zahid, a former Supreme Court justice in his 70s, blames what he calls moral decay in Pakistani society, in which respect for rules has fallen, merit has been forgotten and cheating has become a way of life.

“In my time, it was considered a moral thing for a person to file a tax return,” he said. “Today, corruption has broken all records.”

Salman Masood contributed reporting.

Re: Taxing the rich

m.guardian.co.uk

David Cameron has told the Pakistan elite that they have to start paying more tax and cut out government waste and weakness if the British public are to back his plans to pour £650m in UK aid into Pakistani schools.

Pakistan is now to become the single largest recipient of UK aid, but Cameron issued his warning in a wide-ranging speech in Islamabad, setting out his plans for a fresh start with the Pakistan government after a turbulent year in which he criticised them for “facing both ways” on terrorism.

The prime minister is keen to put the relationship on a more even footing and move away from the previous stance encapsulated in the phrase “Pakistan must do more”.

He said the British people would need convincing that every penny of the aid designed to help recruit 90,000 extra teachers and put 4 million children into education was going to the right places.

He added: “My job is made more difficult when people in Britain look at Pakistan, a country that receives millions of pounds of our aid money, and see weaknesses in terms of government capacity and waste.”

**He pointed out that Pakistan “currently spends only 1.5% of its GDP on education and, what’s more, you have one of the lowest tax to GDP ratios in the world”.
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He said the Pakistan was simply “not raising the resources necessary to pay for things that a modern state and people require”.

The Pakistani fiscal position was a serious one because “too few people pay tax. Too many of your richest people are getting away without paying much tax at all – and that’s not fair”, he said.

He said this tax avoidance was neither fair “on ordinary Pakistanis, who suffer at the sharpest end of this weak governance, or on British taxpayers, who are contributing to Pakistan’s future”.

Cameron is acutely aware that he is taking a risk in increasing aid to a country that is seen as both corrupt and the source of the biggest terrorist threat to the UK. Pakistan is also buying six submarines from China.

But he claimed the 17 million Pakistanis of school age not in education represented an emergency, adding that it cost the country more per year than a flood such as the one that hit last year. He also said such an education gap represented a breeding ground for extremism.

Re: Taxing the rich

my professor once said, one of the reasons Pakistan is facing these challenges is because of the fact that the elite does not pay taxes, majority does not! yes there are few exceptions.

if we look at our parliamentarians, they are not interested in paying taxes as well, but they are quick to point fingers at others. I was reading somewhere that Pakistan elite is not interested in increasing tax-GDP ratio because according to many they are not using government resources, they have their own private hospitals, schools e.t.c, since, they are not dependent on state resources, they are like why should we pay when we are not using government resources!! so thats their weird explanation!

its not the first time Pakistan is criticized by the west,Clinton said the same thing last year! its funny elite enjoys all the privileges, yet they are not ready to contribute back to Pakistan! either they dont pay back anything, or they pay little, dont know how would this country go forward, if the situation remains the same.

"The Pakistani taxation system has been described as “a* system of the elite, by the elite and for the elite. It is a skewed system in which the poor man subsidises the rich man.”*

Re: Taxing the rich

:hmmm:

Imran suggests to tax the powerful - geo.tv

**ISLAMABAD: Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) chief Imran Khan has suggested that the powerful should have to be taxed if the country has to progress, Geo News reported.

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The PTI chief was addressing a press conference flanked by party’s Policy and Planning Cell head, Jahangir Khan Tareen and Asad Umer.

Khan said that corruption was at an all time high in Pakistan and that the National Accountability Bureau should be made into a sovereign institution if there was any hope of eliminating this menace for the country.

Giving his advice to the national finance managers to how to bridge the tax to GDP ratio, Imran said the powerful needed to be brought into the tax net. ‘Pakistan has defaulted and the rulers are enjoying at the cost of poor.’

Imran said the rulers are themselves not paying the tax adding that the big leaders have not declared their true assets.

Terming the politics of PML-N ‘all drama’ he said there are four CM Houses in the Punjab, being run on taxpayers’ money while the masses are suffering.

Calling for the audit of the defence budget he said accounts of Pakistan Army be audited along with all the discretionary funds of the president, prime minister and chief ministers.

Re: Taxing the rich

Every Pakistani is dependent on the state. The wealthy might not be availing public healthcare or schools however they are using the police, water, electricity. The government is the entity planning and providing these these services. And then there is the Army. If Pakistan faces a foreign invasion the wealthy will lose the most, because they have more material possessions than everyone else. They need the government to maintain these services.