By Nasir Jamal
PUNJAB’s budget for the next financial year
represents the entrenchment of two important trends in public finance: rise in
spending on populist schemes and stubborn resistance to tax the exempted and
under-taxed sectors of the provincial economy.
The liberal election-related expenditure
booked in its next budget without expanding the provincial tax base is feared
to hamper the government’s capacity to spare required resources for social and
economic infrastructure development.
The government has set aside a hefty Rs34
billion for food, transport and other subsidies and Rs15 billion for schemes
like distribution of interest-free loans, subsidised tractors and yellow cabs
and free laptops to voters, especially youth. Other initiatives that aim to win
votes in coming elections include free distribution of state land for housing
and internship programme for graduates.
The allocations for subsidies and youth
initiatives form 20 per cent of the proposed development outlay of Rs250
billion and 6.4 per cent of the total budget. The development budget, which
carries a deficit of Rs30 billion for which no financing is available, shows
13.6 per cent increase in its size over the original outlay for the current
fiscal. The current expenditure has
grown by 22 per cent, on the other hand.
grown by 22 per cent, on the other hand.
The tax revenue target has been raised by a
paltry seven per cent to Rs95 billion, including sales tax (GST provincial) on
services of Rs40.50 billion. The target for tax collection on agriculture
income remains abysmally low at Rs720 million.
“The government’s reluctance to effectively
tax the under-taxed sectors like agriculture and real estate has transformed
these highly elastic taxes into inelastic taxes,” a professor of Lahore School of
Economics commented on condition of anonymity.
“The government desperately needs to
restructure the existing taxes and mobilise new taxes in order to finance its
development, remove infrastructure gaps for boosting economic growth and create
jobs,” he said.
A similar advice was given by the Institute
of Public Policy (IPP) in its annual report — The State of the Economy: The
Punjab Story — to pursue an “aggressive policy of resource mobilisation
involving development of provincial taxes on services,
agriculture income and real estate.”
agriculture income and real estate.”
“The populist, election-related initiatives
announced in the budget represent continuation of the Shahbaz Sharif
government’s focus on the populist fiscal policies at the expense of growth,
jobs and economic infrastructure,” one of the contributors to the IPP report,
who refused to give his name, commented. He, however, said it was foolish to
expect any government to take
unpopular measures like imposition of taxes in an election year.
unpopular measures like imposition of taxes in an election year.
“No government will want to risk losing votes
and political support of the powerful lobbies by taking such unpopular steps in
its last year in power. Other provinces and the federal government too have
dithered on tough fiscal reforms in their budgets for the next year for similar
reasons,” he argued.
The projected shortfall of Rs15-20 billion in
its share from the federal taxes and non-realisation of foreign project
assistance of just above Rs7 billion during the current fiscal year has forced
the provincial government to cut its spending on social and economic
infrastructure development by a hefty 29 per cent to below Rs157 billion from
the original programme of Rs220 billion.
The revised estimates for the current year
for different sectors show that development funds for education were cut by a
whopping 57 per cent, health by 30 per cent, livestock by 60 per cent and
agriculture by 42 per cent. Not a single paisa was released for the provincial
Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) from Rs8.5 billion set aside for the same
in the budget. Only 22 per cent of the total allocation of Rs9 billion for
energy was released.
The lack of any effort to raise provincial
tax revenues reinforces Punjab’s dependence on federal transfers under the
National Finance Commission (NFC) award. Over 83 per cent of the Rs783 billion
Punjab budget will be financed by federal transfers (of Rs650.74 billion), 12
per cent by provincial tax revenue and the remaining five per cent by other
sources like provincial non-tax receipts (of Rs35 billion).
“Historically, over 80 per cent funding for
budgets of all the provinces comes from the federal taxes or straight
transfers. The budgets of other provinces will prove my contention. So it is
not fair to single out Punjab for its reliance on federal transfers,” argued a
Punjab planning and development department official.
He, nevertheless, agreed that the possible
shortfall in federal tax collection would hurt the provincial development
spending just as it had done this year and the previous years.
But he claimed that the government was trying
to improve provincial revenue collection through administrative reforms and
changes, citing the decision to set up the Punjab Revenue Authority for
collecting sales tax on services from next fiscal. “Later on other provincial
taxes will also be reformed and transferred to the new authority,” he said.
“The tax on agriculture income will not
generate the kind of revenues some experts say it can. On the contrary, it may
prove counterproductive and affect our agriculture sector,” he insisted.
He was hopeful that the provincial sales tax
on services had the potential to generate substantial revenues in the coming
years with the growth in services sector. But can that be used as an excuse to
leave incomes of powerful lobbies outside the tax net? Not really.
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