Islamabad: Majority of Pakistan’s cabinet and two thirds of its federal lawmakers did not pay tax in 2011, according to a study entitled “Representation without Taxation” by investigative journalist Umar Cheema.
According to report, Pakistan’s elected leaders have estimated average net wealth of $882,000.
“The problem starts at the top. Those who make revenue policies, run the government and collect taxes, have not been able to set good examples for others,” said the report, according to AFP
Pakistan has one of the lowest tax-to-GDP ratios in the world, estimated at 9.2 per cent. Only 260,000 out of 180 million citizens have paid tax consecutively for the last three years, according to the Federal Board of Revenues (FBR).
Pakistan’s refusal to implement sweeping tax reform was instrumental in the collapse of an $11.3 billion IMF bailout programme in November 2010.
The country is one of the biggest recipients of Western aid – payouts which US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and British Prime Minister David Cameron have said are difficult to increase when Pakistan’s own elite pays no tax.
The report, which marks the launch of the Centre for Investigative Reporting in Pakistan (CIRP), based its findings on information from the FBR and lawmakers themselves. It urges politicians to disclose their tax returns voluntarily in future.
According to Cheema’s findings, President Asif Ali Zardari did not file a tax return in 2011 and neither did 34 of the 55 cabinet members including Interior Minister Rehman Malik.
Information was not available for one cabinet minister.
Of the 20 cabinet ministers who did pay, most made only negligible contributions, including Prime Minister Raja Pervez Ashraf, with 142,536 rupees ($1,466) and Foreign Minister Hina Rabbani Khar with 69,619 rupees ($716).
The cabinet member who paid the most was Water and Power Minister Ahmad Mukhtar with 1.09 million rupees ($11,223). Religious Affairs Minister Syed Khurshid Ahmed Shah paid the least with 43,333 rupees ($446).
Among all the lawmakers in the upper and lower houses of the federal parliament, 67 per cent failed to file tax returns in 2011; 28 per cent did and five per cent were not possible to verify, according to the report.
It also found that 78 members of parliament are still not registered with a national taxation number.
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