Negotiations with the IMF often tend to be somewhat uncomfortable moments for the government since it is the only institution to publicly question the pie-in-the-sky assumptions about revenues. For instance, for the past seven years in a row, the federal government has been listing $800 million from Etisalat as revenue expected in the coming year, on account of the $2.6 billion acquisition of its management control in the Pakistan Telecommunications Company. The previous government had been doing so without doing anything to resolve the differences between it and Etisalat that caused that amount to be withheld in the first place.
In addition, for four years, the government has been assuming close to $1 billion in revenue from auctioning 3G mobile telecommunications spectrum in the country, again without having done any homework on actually making that auction a reality. It would have been embarrassing enough had it just been the IMF pointing out these mistakes but, they are so obvious and have been made so often that now, even the Senate finance committee has asked the government to stop deluding itself that this money will ever come in its coffers and come up with a budget that relies on more realistic expectations of revenue.
We would go one step further and argue that the government should stop overtaxing sectors that it finds easiest to tax. Why, for instance, is the telecommunications sector taxed so heavily and the export-oriented textile sector left completely untaxed? It is an unfairness that needs to be addressed.
Published in The Express Tribune, June 22nd, 2013.
Like Opinion & Editorial on Facebook, follow @ETOpEd on Twitter to receive all updates on all our daily pieces.
COMMENTS (2)
Comments are moderated and generally will be posted if they are on-topic and not abusive.
For more information, please see our Comments FAQ
@Sodomite. The fundamental problem is that Pakistan spends more money than it makes - your solution isn't practical nor does it solve the long term problem. It makes no sense to portrait the IMF as a bad guy when there asking Pakistan to do something that everyone on the planet is required to do - live within your means.
After reading this my stomach is going to give way. Can't we appeal to Pakistanis with cash in Swiss banks to loan the money. We can keep it in the family instead of being done over by IMF babus.