Agencies
Islamabad, May 14:
The political crisis caused by the collapse of Pakistan's ruling coalition is impacting on the country's budget making exercise, with bureaucrats apprehending they would not be able to complete the task by the early June deadline.
Pakistan's fiscal 2008-09 begins July 1. Finance Minister
Ishaq Dar was among the nine ministers of the Pakistan Muslim
League-Nawaz (PML-N) who resigned Monday after party chief
Nawaz Sharif pulled out of the Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP)
led coalition following differences on the reinstatement of
Supreme Court and high court judges sacked by President Pervez
Musharraf after declaring an emergency last November. Prime
Minister Yousaf Raza Gillani Tuesday refused to accept the
resignations, saying efforts were being made to resolve the
differences between the coalition partners. In the midst of
all this, 'there is no guideline available to bureaucrats
working on taxes and allocations for development', The News
reported Wednesday. 'The very chaos that was caused by the
pronounced resolve of the PML-N to quit the cabinet had left
(bureaucrats) without policy guidelines over the past fortnight,'
it added. 'These are crucial days for the budget makers and
no guidance from the top leaves them in a void without a vision
about the requirements of the government spending and parameters
for development allocations,' the newspaper maintained.
The most important decision awaiting the finance minister
is on implementing a proposal to increase the general sales
tax (GST) on the power and oil sectors to help meet development
spending targets. Some budget makers and their senior colleagues
in the tax departments have been cautioning against increasing
the tax rate on oil sector items and on electricity. They
have warned the budget makers that such an 'unpopular proposal'
might jeopardise the elected government's resolve to help
the people out of the inflationary trends that are already
hitting essentials like flour, vegetables, meat, house-rents
and construction materials. About five years ago, there was
a countrywide protest after the Central Board of Revenue announced
an increase in the GST on medicines and the government had
to withdraw the proposal. This time, when the budget makers
lack political guidelines, 'we might make a mistake that would
be hard to rectify', The News quoted a senior bureaucrat as
saying.