logo
Ministry asked to get IMF nod for oil tax

Ministry asked to get IMF nod for oil tax

Express Tribune19-06-2025
Finance Minister Ishaq Dar said that the imposition of 17% general sales tax would increase the HOBC price by Rs45 per litre, therefore, he did not approve the proposal. photo: file
Listen to article
The Special Investment Facilitation Council (SIFC) has directed the Ministry of Finance to swiftly secure consent of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) for imposing sales tax on petroleum products as the matter has stalled investments of $6 billion in refinery upgrade projects.
The government had earlier agreed to remove sales tax exemption on petroleum products to support struggling oil refineries and oil marketing companies. It committed to imposing 5% sales tax on petroleum, but did not include it in the Finance Bill 2025, sparking concerns in the oil industry.
The Oil Companies Advisory Council (OCAC) – an industry lobby – had also raised the issue with the federal government for failing to meet the commitment and for continuing the tax exemption.
The oil industry claims it has suffered Rs34 billion in losses during the ongoing financial year, which has prompted the government to allow loss recovery through the inland freight equalisation margin.
"However, the main issue of GST removal from petroleum products remains in place," an industry official told The Express Tribune.
Sources said that the issue landed in a recent meeting of the SIFC, which voiced concern over delay in resolving the matter. The finance ministry informed the SIFC that it had presented the proposal of levying GST on petroleum to the IMF and was awaiting its consent.
The ministry expressed hope that the IMF's nod would be secured before the approval of budget by parliament.
Industry officials pointed out that the government had additionally imposed carbon and petroleum levies on furnace oil, which would cause a halt to their furnace oil sales.
Since the release of the Finance Bill 2024 in June last year, refineries have actively pursued the inclusion of high-speed diesel, motor spirit (petrol), kerosene oil and light diesel oil in the exemption regime under the Sales Tax Act, 1990 with the authorities concerned.
Through consistent and collaborative efforts from June 2024 to May 2025, the government approved a mechanism for reimbursing the additional cost of sales tax inputs, resulting from the exemption status of petroleum products for fiscal year 2024-25.
Regrettably, despite assurances and constructive engagement, the matter remains unresolved in the Finance Bill 2025. This undermines investor confidence, disrupts long-term planning and runs counter to objectives of Pakistan Oil Refining Policy for Upgradation of Existing/Brownfield Refineries, 2023 that seeks to attract investments of $6 billion.
In case the dispute drags on, it will not only derail plant upgrade plans but will also pose financial and liquidity challenges to existing operations as refineries run under a regulatory pricing regime and are unable to recover this additional burden from product pricing.
Separately, a summary is circulating on social media, suggesting that the Ministry of Energy (Petroleum Division) has proposed the imposition of petroleum levy on high sulphur fuel oil (HSFO) at Rs82,077 per metric ton. This is in addition to a carbon levy of Rs2,665/MT on HSFO, as proposed in the Finance Bill 2025.
It is feared that the application of petroleum and carbon levies will result in an 80% increase in the end-user price of HSFO. This may lead to a further reduction in industrial activity and domestic demand. With lower local consumption, government revenues with respect to sales tax collection will go down markedly and refineries will be forced to export HSFO at a significant financial loss.
In addition, the refineries that consume HSFO as fuel in their own operations will be burdened with a sharp rise in operating costs due to the inclusion of petroleum and carbon levies.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Pakistan removes hurdle in trade deal with US
Pakistan removes hurdle in trade deal with US

Express Tribune

time3 hours ago

  • Express Tribune

Pakistan removes hurdle in trade deal with US

Finance Minister Muhammad Aurangzeb shakes hands with US Secretary of Commerce Howard Lutnick during a meeting in Washington on Friday, July 18, 2025. Photo: Ministry of Finance Listen to article In a major concession to the United States for striking a trade deal, Pakistan on Wednesday exempted 5% tax, which it had imposed a month ago on foreign tech firms and online platforms on supply of digitally ordered goods and services. However, the tax exemption is not specific to only the US tech companies. All the foreign firms will benefit from the decision, which has been taken on the demand of the US administration, a senior official of the Federal Board of Revenue told The Express Tribune. The FBR, the nation's tax collecting authority, notified the waiver on Wednesday, the day Finance Minister Muhammad Aurangzeb was in Washington to further bilateral trade talks. Also Read: SBP keeps interest rate at 11% 'In exercise of the powers conferred by section 15 of the Digital Presence Proceeds Tax Act, 2025, the federal government is pleased to direct that the Digital Presence Proceeds Tax shall not apply to digitally ordered goods and services supplied from outside Pakistan, by any person, which are chargeable to tax under the said Act,' according to the FBR notification. It further added that the tax will be waived off with effect from the first day of July 1, 2025 — the day the new law and fiscal year 2025–26 budget became effective. A Pakistani delegation is currently in the US to settle the outstanding issues that are hampering the bilateral trade deal. It is the second visit by the Pakistani team in less than two weeks, aimed at securing the trade deal that can address the US concerns and to a greater degree protect Pakistan's commercial interests. The sources said that during the last round of trade talks held between Pakistan's Finance Minister and the US Secretary of Commerce, Howard Lutnick, the US had raised the issue of the 5% tax imposed in the budget, which was hurting the US tech giants. Read: IMF puts growth below govt target The waiver will cause billions of rupees in tax losses to Pakistan. The Finance Ministry sources said that to address any concern by the International Monetary Fund, the US authorities may directly speak to the Fund. The US is the single largest shareholder of the IMF, having little over 16% stakes. The government had imposed the 5% digital proceeds tax on the grounds that the cross-border e-commerce by foreign vendors remained largely untaxed in Pakistan due to tax treaty limitations requiring a permanent establishment for income taxation. The FBR had apprised the National Assembly Standing Committee on Finance that the tax base of market jurisdictions' erosion was occurring as foreign businesses used digital platforms to sell goods and services without physical presence. Many countries have introduced Digital Services Taxes (DST) to reclaim taxing rights based on significant digital presence, especially for services, and accordingly Pakistan proposed to tax both digitally supplied goods and services. Also Read: Cabinet approves national AI policy, targets 1m professionals by 2030 The standing committee had also been briefed that the digital advertisement of foreign vendors i.e., Temu in the Pakistani market by platforms such as Google would be taxed in consistency with Pakistani taxing rights. Under the new law, payment intermediaries — including banks and financial institutions — were required to collect tax on digital payments made to foreign vendors supplying goods or services into Pakistan. They are also required to quarterly report the revenue collected from international e-commerce providers. The Express Tribune reported on July 19th that Pakistan had assured the United States-based Google that it will be exempted from a 5% new digital tax and parts of the company's income will be taxed even at two-thirds reduced rates. The government had enacted the Digital Presence Proceeds Act in June to enhance tax collection from the offshore companies that had significant digital presence but were not paying taxes on their earnings. This month, the tax authorities assured the company that 'Google is not the target of the Digital Presence Proceeds Tax Act' and the legislation has been designed to cover specific cases of significant digital presence where no physical or registered business presence exists in Pakistan. Read More: PSX closes up as State Bank leaves rate unchanged Google has significant business presence in Pakistan and provides services for online advertising, search engine, cloud computing, communication, and entertainment. It is also the single largest contributor of digital service tax payments. Companies like Meta, Amazon, Microsoft, and Netflix will also be the beneficiaries of the tax exemption. The enactment of the Digital Presence Proceeds Act had created ripples in Pakistan, particularly among the YouTube users. The government had introduced the digital presence proceeds law to tax digitally delivered services provided over the internet or electronic networks, where the delivery is automated and required minimal or no human intervention, including music, audio and video streaming services, cloud services, online software application services, services delivered through online interpersonal interaction i.e., tele-medicine, e-learning etc, online banking services, architectural design services, research and consultancy reports, accounting services in the form of digital files, or any other online facility.

Pakistan makes peace overture to India
Pakistan makes peace overture to India

Express Tribune

time19 hours ago

  • Express Tribune

Pakistan makes peace overture to India

DPM Ishaq Dar addressing international conference on 'Question of Palestine and the Implementation of the Two-State Solution' at UN on Monday. Photo : Listen to article In a renewed bid for regional peace, Pakistan on Tuesday extended an olive branch to India, offering to resume comprehensive talks to resolve all outstanding disputes between the two nuclear-armed neighbours, including the decades-old Kashmir issue. Speaking at a news conference in New York, Deputy Prime Minister Ishaq Dar, who also serves as the country's foreign minister, reiterated Pakistan's willingness for "composite dialogue," emphasizing that any future engagement must go beyond the issue of terrorism. "Pakistan has itself been one of the biggest victims of terrorism," Dar said, adding that the offer was made in good faith and with the aim of achieving durable peace in South Asia. The foreign minister asserted that there could not be lasting peace in the region without resolving the Jammu and Kashmir dispute. He said even US President Donald Trump had repeatedly acknowledged the importance of the issue. Dar's comments came after his meeting with US Secretary of State Marco Rubio. During the meeting, both leaders discussed regional security and Pakistan's contributions to the global war on terror. "Secretary Rubio recognized Pakistan's sacrifices," Dar said. On the Indus Waters Treaty, he reaffirmed Islamabad's position that the agreement is legally binding and cannot be altered unilaterally. He warned that any attempts by India to divert or block Pakistan's share of river waters would be unacceptable. In response to a question on Israel, he made it clear that Pakistan has no plans to establish diplomatic ties with Tel Aviv. He called for an immediate ceasefire in Gaza and reiterated Pakistan's support for the creation of an independent Palestinian state, with Al-Quds Al-Sharif (Jerusalem) as its capital. Earlier in the day, the foreign minister addressed the High-Level International Conference on the Peaceful Settlement of the Question of Palestine and Implementation of the Two-State Solution. In a strongly-worded speech, he condemned Israeli actions in Gaza and called for urgent international intervention. "For over 75 years, the Palestinian people have endured occupation, displacement and denial of their fundamental rights," Dar said. "Gaza is now a graveyard of international law." He cited the killing of over 58,000 Palestinians — mostly women and children — as a "grave breach of international humanitarian law" and called for accountability for war crimes and crimes against humanity. "This collective punishment must stop now," he declared. Dar outlined Pakistan's key demands that include an immediate, unconditional, and permanent ceasefire across Gaza and all occupied Palestinian territories, full and unimpeded humanitarian access, political and financial reinforcement for UNRWA and end to Israeli impunity through international accountability mechanisms and a genuine and irreversible political process toward a two-state solution. He welcomed France's recent decision to recognize Palestine and urged other nations to follow suit. He also supported the Organization of Islamic Cooperation's (OIC) proposal for an international protection mechanism for Palestinians and pledged to contribute technical and institutional assistance in areas like public health, education, and governance. "The occupation must end and end now," he demanded. "The best guarantee for lasting peace is freedom, self-determination, and full UN membership for Palestine."

IMF puts growth below govt target
IMF puts growth below govt target

Express Tribune

time20 hours ago

  • Express Tribune

IMF puts growth below govt target

Listen to article The International Monetary Fund (IMF) on Tuesday projected Pakistan's economic growth rate at 3.6% for the current fiscal year, below the government's official target of 4.2%. The projection was released in the IMF's latest World Economic Outlook Update report which kept Pakistan's growth forecast unchanged. The government had set a higher growth goal based on expected recovery in agriculture and industrial sectors. However, the World Bank recently estimated that poverty in Pakistan affects nearly 45% of the population. Official data on poverty and unemployment is currently unavailable, though the Pakistan Bureau of Statistics (PBS) is said to be updating relevant surveys. Due to outdated data, the provisional GDP growth rate of 2.7% for FY2024-25 has been disputed by independent economists. The PBS plans to release findings of the latest Agriculture Census next month, which may address some of these queries. On the same day, the federal government also briefed foreign diplomats on recent economic developments and sought support to increase foreign direct investment (FDI), which remains low. The diplomats raised concerns over rising debt costs, heavy reliance on costly commercial loans, tax relief measures, and the sustainability of the Power Division's plan to cut circular debt through Rs1.25 trillion in fresh domestic borrowing. Finance Minister of State Bilal Azhar Kayani and Power Minister Sardar Awais Ahmad Khan Leghari led the briefing for diplomats from the US, UK, EU, Italy, Germany, Canada, Australia, Switzerland, Japan, the Netherlands, and Saudi Arabia. According to a finance ministry press release, officials outlined reforms in taxation and the power sector. Kayani said Pakistan's macroeconomic strategy had shifted from stabilisation to sustained reform. He noted that GDP growth was 2.7% in FY2024-25, and per capita income increased by 10% to $1,824. However, this was based on old and relatively low population estimates. The finance ministry claimed a 3.1% primary surplus in GDP, the highest in 20 years, though it did not clarify in the press note whether this was for the full year or only the first 11 months. Inflation dropped to 4.5%, a nine-year low, while the central bank's policy rate was halved from 22% to 11%. The debt-to-GDP ratio also reportedly declined to 69%, indicating improved fiscal management. Diplomats asked how the government planned to reduce the high cost of external debt. Officials said that the strategy had already been finalised with both the IMF and the World Bank. The finance ministry said the external sector showed resilience, recording a $2.1 billion current account surplus, the first in 14 years and the highest in 22 years. This was supported by strong remittances, higher exports, rising FDI, and stable foreign reserves of over $14.5 billion. Officials claimed this performance was achieved without heavy reliance on foreign borrowing. However, the central bank purchased at least $7.3 billion from the local market between July and April, which kept the rupee artificially low. This sum exceeded the entire three-year size of the IMF bailout package. Diplomats were also told that two credit rating agencies had recently given Pakistan positive reviews, and Moody's is expected to upgrade the country soon. S&P upgraded Pakistan to 'B negative' last week, advising further political and security stability for continued progress. In the energy sector, Leghari told diplomats that significant milestones had been achieved, although questions remained over their long-term sustainability. He said the circular debt, now around Rs2.4 trillion, was being addressed under a plan agreed with the IMF. The government has secured Rs1.25 trillion in commercial loans to pay down a large portion of this debt. The repayment will be funded through a Rs3.24 per unit electricity surcharge, ultimately borne by consumers. Diplomats questioned whether this approach was sustainable. Leghari acknowledged structural problems such as high tariffs and inefficient pricing, which had made electricity unaffordable for households and industry. These issues had also created fiscal pressures. To address them, the government has undertaken broad-based reforms centred on tariff rationalisation, fiscal responsibility and operational improvement. Leghari said progress had been made in stabilising circular debt in FY2025. He also pointed out the need to modernise energy planning to account for seasonal demand shifts, regional supply gaps, and the rising role of distributed generation. Distribution company performance was another key focus. Leghari said infrastructure upgrades and strengthened governance were underway to reduce losses, with reforms implemented to ensure regional equity and institutional coordination. He called on foreign governments and global investors to invest in the energy sector, citing $2-3 billion in potential across grid modernisation, renewable energy, distribution efficiency, and energy services. He also noted that the government aims to privatise electricity distribution companies, with three companies being restructured for privatisation by early 2026. Chairman FBR, Rashid Langrial, briefed diplomats on the FBR Transformation Plan, built on three pillars: people, process, and technology. He claimed that real tax collection had increased by 46% due to improved compliance and enforcement. He also stated that the tax-to-GDP ratio rose to 10.24% in FY2025, up from 8.8% in FY2024. However, Pakistan still missed its IMF revenue target by 0.3% of GDP, despite levying record-high taxes last year.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store