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LAHORE, Dec 18: Minister of State for Economic Affairs Hina Rabbani Khar has
said that the government is in a position to take a consensus decision and
resolve the differences between the provinces on National Finance Commission (NFC)
Award.
“The government is committed to take along every province on the NFC issue and
resolve it amicably,” she told a conference on Tax Policy Options for Pakistan
on Thursday. She said resource distribution under the NFC had generated
controversies in the past, but was hopeful that the government would be able to
settle these issues.
Talking to the media she said the government was working to abandon the
concurrent list as was committed by Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani.
Talking about food prices she said the government was considering taking
administrative measures to bring the prices of edible oil down.
She said the government had not enough money to meet its expenses and needed to
increase revenue generation. She urged the need to evolve a tax system in which
all provinces and entities of the state worked together. She said tax reforms
and infrastructure development were crucial to improve the tax base.
Later, Shaukat Tarin, the prime minister’s adviser on finance, told the final
session of the conference that Pakistan needed to reform tax administration to
make it broad-based, equitable, simpler and transparent. “We need to develop a
broad-based tax system administrated properly. It should be devised in a manner
in which each and every Pakistani shares the burden instead of some people, who
ultimately find ways of evading taxes,” he said.
Acknowledging that the revenue target fixed for the current fiscal year was
tough, he pointed out that there were many people who were not paying taxes. “If
the tax department could tap only 10 to 20 per cent of them, there should be no
difficulty in meeting the target,” he suggested.
Mr Tarin said Pakistan had to move in the direction in which most developing and
developed countries had already moved. “All of us have to pay taxes,” he added.
He said the FBR should make efforts to collect greater revenue and the
government was ready to share a part of the collection for spending on the
administration of the department or for improving compensation for its officers
showing outstanding performance.
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