Tax Work

IMF Proposes 45% Tax Rate on Agricultural Income in Pakistan

IMF Proposes 45% Tax Rate on Agricultural Income in Pakistan

As Pakistan struggles with its economic challenges, the International Monetary Fund (IMF) has put forth a significant proposal.

The IMF recommends imposing a standard individual income tax rate of up to 45% on agricultural income.

This move aims to address income tax disparities without requiring constitutional amendments.

Key Points:

  1. Background and Structural Benchmarks:
    • Pakistan seeks an IMF bailout to stabilize its economy.
    • The IMF’s condition is part of the structural benchmarks for the next bailout program.
    • Provincial laws must align with federal income tax rates by October 2024.
    • The IMF also calls for ending income tax exemptions for the livestock sector by October this year.
  2. Constitutional Constraints:
    • Under the Constitution, the federal government cannot tax agricultural income.
    • Provinces collect taxes from the agriculture sector, contributing 24% to the economy but only 0.1% of total taxes nationwide.
    • The IMF avoids touching the constitutional arrangement but urges provinces to adopt non-salaried business individuals’ income tax rates (up to 45% of net income).
  3. Tax Rates and World Bank Estimate:
    • Before the budget, salaried income tax was 35% on monthly gross income over Rs. 500,000.
    • Right after the budget it is 35% on the monthly income of Rs. 341,000 and 39% on the monthly income of Rs. 833,000.
    • The new rate is 45% of the net income and after adding surcharge it is 50% for non-salaried individuals.
    • The World Bank estimates that Pakistan can generate farm income tax equal to 1% of GDP (approximately Rs1.22 trillion).
  4. Provincial Consent and Challenges:
    • Provincial governments largely agree with the IMF’s demand.
    • The Sindh government finds the 35% to 45% income tax rate for the agriculture sector too high compared to the existing 15% maximum rate.
  5. Implementation Timeline and Impact:
    • Provinces must align agriculture income tax regimes with federal rates.
    • Corporate farming will also be subject to corporate income tax.
    • Each province will collect up to 45% agriculture income tax by January 2025.
    • Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa exempts up to one acre of land from income tax.
    • Punjab’s rates vary based on annual agriculture income.
  6. Transparency and GST Expansion:
    • The IMF also asks provinces to expand the GST on services by ending current exemptions.
    • The goal is to enhance transparency and reduce loopholes.
  7. Challenges Ahead:
    • The IMF’s proposal aims to eliminate income tax disparities and treat agricultural income like other sources.
    • The government faces deadlines for finalizing agreements with the IMF and improving credit ratings.

Although the IMF had also demanded a levy of 18% sales tax on fertilizer and pesticides, but the federal government successfully protected farmers.

Balancing tax reforms while protecting farmers remains a challenge.

The proposed changes will significantly impact Pakistan’s fiscal landscape and economic stability.

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