ISLAMABAD: A recent meeting of the Senate Standing Committee on Finance and Revenue brought renewed attention to a dispute between the Federal Board of Revenue (FBR) and four Chinese tile manufacturers over the installation of surveillance cameras inside production facilities. The companies argued that the cameras expose sensitive manufacturing methods, while the tax authority maintained that monitoring is essential to counter entrenched tax evasion in the sector.
The issue was discussed in detail during a session chaired by Senator Saleem Mandviwalla. FBR officials briefed the committee on the origins of the monitoring system, explaining that cameras were first deployed in the sugar industry after evidence of large-scale underreporting.
Similar gaps, they said, were later detected in cement and tiles, prompting the expansion of the system.
According to the FBR, the tile sector alone is estimated to be causing losses of nearly Rs30 billion annually due to understated production. The authority said the cameras are positioned only to record output and are not intended to capture proprietary formulas or industrial techniques. After concerns were raised by the Chinese firms, the number of cameras was reduced from fifteen to four, but the FBR declined to remove them entirely, saying this would undermine ongoing enforcement efforts.
Company representatives insisted that the cameras compromise trade secrets and warned that persistent surveillance could affect their willingness to operate in Pakistan.
The committee also took note of reports that the firms questioned the predictability of regulatory policies. FBR officials, however, stood by their position, arguing that accurate tax assessment is impossible without verifying real-time production data in sectors where manual record-keeping has historically been unreliable.
The broader debate highlights the challenge of balancing investor confidence with the state’s responsibility to curb revenue leaks. Businesses have raised legitimate privacy concerns, while policymakers point to significant tax losses across multiple industries. Analysts say any monitoring system must be supported by clear rules, strict limits on data use, and safeguards against misuse to maintain trust between the government and investors.
Globally, tax agencies are turning toward digital reporting and automated compliance tools. Pakistan’s reliance on cameras remains a stopgap measure until stronger documentation and digital audit systems are fully implemented. For now, the FBR’s stance indicates that surveillance in high-risk sectors will continue, though industry representatives stress the need for clearer legal frameworks and more transparent oversight to ensure that compliance measures do not discourage foreign investment.
The committee has urged the authorities and the businesses involved to resolve the matter through dialogue, with an emphasis on balancing revenue needs with commercial confidentiality.






