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The announcement comes ahead of what Pakistan hopes will be an agreement to unlock a new tranche of IMF funds which are needed to avert a balance of payment crisis. Image Credit: Bloomberg

Islamabad: Pakistan will impose an extra one-time 10 per cent tax on large scale industry for one year to raise over 400 billion Pakistani rupees ($1.93 billion) to clinch a crucial deal from the International Monetary Fund, Finance Minister Miftah Ismail said on Friday.

The announcement comes ahead of what Pakistan hopes will be an agreement to unlock a new tranche of IMF funds which are needed to avert a balance of payment crisis.

“Let me share this good news that this country isn’t heading toward a default anymore,” the finance minister told parliament in his concluding budget speech that brought in the new taxes.

“We’ve taken very difficult decisions,” he said.

Ismail called it a super tax, pleading with large scale industry to bear with it for just one year to help shore up revenues urgently required to cut the fiscal deficit.

He said tax will be levied on 13 big industries, companies and corporations, including sugar, steel, cement, oil and gas, fertilizer, cigarettes, chemical, automobiles, banks, textile, LNG terminals and beverages, which have earnings exceeding 300 million Pakistani rupee ($1.45 million).

“So, their tax rates will go from 29 per cent to 39 per cent,” he clarified separately in a tweet.

But, he said there will be a blanket 4 per cent super tax on all industry.

“Please, contribute your share just for one year. We desperately need it this year,” Ismail appealed to the industrialists in his parliament speech.

Pakistan’s KSE 100 share index fell 4.8 per cent on Friday after the government announced the tax rise.

Ismail said a revised budget will raise the revenue collection target to 7.4 trillion rupees from 7 trillion rupees after the tax imposition.

He said a one-time tax slab from 10 per cent to 40 per cent will also be introduced on individual earnings from 150 million rupees to 400 million rupees a year.

The IMF has been pushing Pakistan to raise revenues and cut expenditures to trim the budget deficit to be able to get its next loan tranche of $900 million, that has been suspended since earlier this year.

“It was necessary to resume the IMF programme to save our country from default,” Ismail said, adding that Pakistan will significantly reduce the total and primary budget deficit for FY2022-23 in agreement with the IMF.

The South Asian nation desperately needs the IMF funding as it has been in the grip of a financial crisis, with foreign exchange reserves held by the central bank falling as low as $8.2 billion, and the Pakistani rupee at record lows against the U.S. dollar.

Pakistan entered the 39-month, $6 billion IMF programme in 2019, but less than half of the amount has been disbursed to date as Islamabad has struggled to keep targets on track.