Khaleej Times

Pakistan’s new finance chief targets tax reforms

- Drazen Jorgic

islamabad — Pakistan’s new finance ministry chief Miftah Ismail said he plans significan­t tax reforms in the five months before the government’s term ends ahead of a 2018 election, and touted a policy of greater currency flexibilit­y.

Pakistan’s government has in recent months devalued the rupee, imposed tariffs on imported goods and sought to boost exports to reduce growing balance of payments pressures fuelling concern about health of the nearly $300 billion economy.

Pakistan this month borrowed $2.5 billion from internatio­nal markets via a sukuk and eurobond offers that were vastly oversubscr­ibed and fetched lower-thanexpect­ed rates.

Ismail, a wealthy businessma­n and former Internatio­nal Monetary Fund (IMF) economist, was on Wednesday appointed as finance adviser to Prime Minister Shahid Khaqan Abbasi in a role that makes him de facto finance minister.

Ismail told Reuters in an interview late on Thursday he plans tax reforms to focus on widening the tax base, simplifyin­g tax structures, and slashing personal tax rates to encourage more people to file returns.

“We have to reduce rates and the prime minister is very eager to especially reduce rates on individual­s,” Ismail said at his home in Islamabad, referring to his close ally Abbasi.

Tax rates on individual­s vary in Pakistan, but can be as high as 30 per cent for salaried individual­s and 35 per cent for non-salaried individual­s.

“(Abbasi) wants to bring it to 15 per cent or so,” Ismail said.

Pakistan has a very narrow tax base. Successive government­s have promised to rein in tax evaders and boost revenues but have faced fierce resistance to change, including from the many politician­s and businessme­n believed to be among those dodging their taxes.

Pakistan’s central bank devalued the currency by about five per cent this month, and the market expects further weakening of the rupee before the polls in mid-2018 to ease balance of payments pressure stemming from a widening trade deficit and growing fiscal deficit.

The devaluatio­n followed the departure

I’m a big believer in the free market... We are largely letting the rupee be Miftah Ismail, Finance adviser to Prime Minister of Pakistan

of Ishaq Dar, the previous finance minister who was staunchly opposed to a weaker rupee and had admonished the central bank for an attempt to weaken the currency in July.

Ismail said the government has altered its policy of the past few years, under which it had essentiall­y pegged the rupee to the dollar and defended its value.

“We’ve decided to not do that,” Ismail added.

Analysts say Pakistan’s central bank effectivel­y sets the currency rate as it is the biggest player in the thinly traded rupee market and controls what is widely understood to be a managed float system.

When asked if he would be opposed to the rupee weakening another five per cent, as the market expects, Ismail said there was a policy of greater flexibilit­y for the currency and he would not be hostile to it either weakening or firming.

“I’m a big believer in the free market,” he said. “We are largely letting the rupee be.”

Ismail also said Pakistan may return to internatio­nal markets for a fresh bond offering but that this was unlikely before late 2018.

“We will probably not go back to the internatio­nal markets to issue a new bond until the end of next calendar year so it will not be in this fiscal year any more,” he said. —

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates