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Home Islamabad

Rs123b revenue loss likely after mobile cards tax suspension

byCT Report
12/06/2018
in Islamabad
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ISLAMABAD: The federal and provincial revenue authorities would have to bear Rs123 billion revenue loss (Rs48 billion to the FBR and Rs75 billion to all provincial governments) during the next fiscal year.

The Federal Board of Revenue (FBR) is going to face revenue loss of Rs4 billion per month with the existing rate of 12.5 percent tax deducted on phone pre-paid card, so the annual tax loss to the national exchequer will be standing at Rs48 billion.

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The provinces used to collect around 19.5 percent tax on phone card, so their total collection would be impacted in the range of Rs75 billion on annual basis. Total accumulated losses in terms of revenue for all over the country can climb to Rs123 billion if this tax on mobile cards remained suspended for whole next fiscal year 2018-19.

The FBR had submitted in its written reply before three-member bench of the apex court that another three-member bench of Supreme Court in 2003 had declared income tax on phone cards as valid tax, so it was a decided matter on behalf of the apex court. The FBR said if the SC wanted to take up this issue again, then a larger bench should be constituted.

Secondly, the FBR prayed in its written statement that the withholding tax on mobile phone cards was adjustable tax which could be obtained back by return filers at the time of filing returns. The FBR said it was conscious about rising burden so they were on the path of reducing the tax as they slashed down the rate from 14.5 to 12.5 percent and the rates were to be brought down further gradually.

Thirdly, the FBR had argued that it is tax on consumption. The FBR officials argued that the poor man paid sales tax on buying a matchbox at Rs10, so how tax on mobile card could be termed illegal. It said it means that all other taxes would have to suspend if one buys this argument that the poor should not pay consumption tax on mobile cards. The FBR said it is applied on all other sectors, then the concept of consumption tax would die in Pakistan.

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