• 6 months ago
#Khabar #Budget2024 #MuhammadAurangzeb #PakistanEconomy #Inflation #NationalAssembly #Budget #PMLNGovt #PPP #bilawalbhutto #SharmilaFaruqui

(Current Affairs)

Host:
- Meher Bokhari

Guests:
- Muhammad Aurangzeb (Minister of Finance and Revenue)
- Taimur Khan Jhagra PTI
- Sharmila Farooqi PPP

Govt proposes up to 20% hike in govt employees' salaries - FM Aurangzeb Told Everything

"IMF Kay Zor Par Ju Nahi Karna Chahiye Tha Wo Kardiya", Taimur Jhagra

Budget Ke Maamla Par Hukoomat Bilawal Bhutto Ko Mananay Mein Nakaam. .. Sharmila Faruqui

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Transcript
00:00Assalam-o-Alaikum and good evening, I am Meher Bukhari.
00:17In the absence of Nawaz Sharif and Bilawal Bhutto, the first budget of Rs. 8000 crore has been presented without consultation from the United Nations government.
00:29After this budget of Rs. 18 crore, a storm of inflation will await.
00:34The government has decided to take back all the losses kept under the zero rating.
00:38It is also advised to invest Rs. 20 per litre in the Petroleum Levy.
00:43It is also advised to reduce the tax on tea leaves and other products from one percent to two and a half percent.
00:52Imported paper, spices, rice and other items will also become expensive.
00:56Reducing the tax on stationery will definitely increase the cost.
01:00In the budget, strict measures have been taken for non-filers from Grade 1 to Grade 16.
01:0525 percent of government employees' salaries and 22 percent of 17 to 22 grade employees' salaries have also been announced.
01:1315 percent increase in pension has been advised.
01:16Pakistan will spend Rs. 20 crore in the pension fund during the Rawa Mali year.
01:21More taxes have been added to the Income Tax Slabs.
01:25Rs. 50,000 is exempt from the Income Tax for monthly income.
01:29But the income tax on monthly income up to Rs. 1 lakh is 5 percent.
01:32Income tax on income earners up to Rs. 1,83,384 is 15 percent.
01:38Income tax on income earners up to Rs. 2,67,667 is 25 percent.
01:42Income tax on income earners up to Rs. 3,41,667 is 30 percent.
01:47While capital gain tax on real estate is advised to be collected at 15 percent.
01:52While 45 percent of the income tax on non-filers has been kept.
01:561 percent advance on withholding tax from non-filers is advised to be increased to 2.25 percent.
02:0318 percent standard tax on mobile phones.
02:06While in the budget, it has been advised to abolish sales tax, exemption, exemption and exemption.
02:13All items of copper, paper, coal and plastic have been decided to impose withholding tax.
02:21While in the budget, it has been advised to abolish sales tax, exemption, exemption and exemption.
02:25While in the budget, it has been advised to abolish sales tax, exemption, exemption and exemption.
02:28While in the budget, it has been advised to abolish sales tax, exemption, exemption and exemption.
02:31While in the budget, it has been advised to abolish sales tax, exemption, exemption and exemption.
02:34While in the budget, it has been advised to abolish sales tax, exemption, exemption and exemption.
02:37While in the budget, it has been advised to abolish sales tax, exemption, exemption and exemption.
02:40While in the budget, it has been advised to abolish sales tax, exemption, exemption and exemption.
02:43While in the budget, it has been advised to abolish sales tax, exemption, exemption and exemption.
02:46We have with us today, the loyal minister of treasury, Mr. Aurangzeb.
02:51Mr. Aurangzeb, thank you very much for being with us.
02:53Please tell us, what relief have you given to the people in the budget?
02:56What steps have been taken to save from inflation?
02:59Because there is still no clarity regarding the 200-unit electricity bill.
03:03What will this group do?
03:04You have also decided to increase the Petroleum Development Levy by Rs. 20 per litre on petrol and diesel.
03:08This will definitely increase inflation.
03:10And the relief that you want to give, it will be difficult to transfer to the people.
03:16As usual, you have asked many questions in just one question.
03:21So, the first thing is that I can tell you that
03:27on all levels, whether it is the government employees or the salaried class,
03:32we have protected them from any increases on the taxation side as we go forward.
03:40So this is an important thing.
03:43And this is on the short-term end.
03:46Secondly, what is being discussed about this PDL,
03:53and you have already mentioned it,
03:55this is just creating the headroom.
03:57This does not mean that we are going in and going to go and impose this.
04:02We have kept this in our contingency measures.
04:10Because if the overall commodity prices and especially the oil prices continue to go north,
04:16wherever we will need a revenue shortfall,
04:21only at that time we will go and apply this.
04:26So, as I mentioned earlier, this was our important thing,
04:31that the salaried class, the vulnerable class,
04:37because you did not mention how far we have taken the BISP program.
04:45Because it is not only meant for the vulnerable segment.
04:51So this time, for the first time, we are also going towards capacity building and skill development.
04:56So this number of things which we are trying to resolve as we move forward,
05:04vis-a-vis a lot of trade-offs that we have to do,
05:08to start getting our economy moving on a sustainable track.
05:15Because see, this country cannot run on a 9.5% tax to GDP ratio.
05:20And if you want to run, then you will have to come back to those levels and impose more taxes.
05:27This year, let's assume we did not do the salaried class,
05:32but if we are talking about further taxes being imposed,
05:39there are a number of things we have to keep into account.
05:44First of all, the non-filers.
05:47The place where we are taking the non-filers,
05:51this 2-3%, 4% difference should not increase.
05:55We have taken it to that level,
05:57that they think 2-3-4 times whether they have to pay taxes in this country
06:02and whether they have to come on the active taxpayer list or not.
06:05Because see, as far as I am concerned, Meher,
06:09if we do not take these big fundamental decisions,
06:14then it will be very difficult to take things forward.
06:21And therefore, our hand has been forced.
06:24Because if we take these non-filers,
06:28I say that this is such a strange invention in this country,
06:34that I don't think there is such an example in the world.
06:41So ultimately, it's all going to be that everyone in this country should be on the active taxpayer list.
06:48That is the starting point.
06:50You are talking about increasing taxes, increasing electricity rates, etc.
06:57Why is this happening?
06:58This is happening because we can provide relief everywhere, provided we have the fiscal space.
07:03Yes.
07:04Because there is no fiscal space,
07:06so we have to find all these other things in many taxes.
07:12So we have to put it on the structural side,
07:14income tax, sales tax and federal excise duty,
07:19we have to take it to a point where we go towards sustainability.
07:23And secondly, this is all the revenue measures.
07:28But as you have just said,
07:30that if we want to improve the electricity sector or the power sector,
07:35then that separate debt issue will not be able to continue.
07:38A question remains to be answered, sir.
07:41Sir, is it really justified to increase the top tax rate to 40-45% for salaried individuals?
07:48And then you have a non-tax revenue of Rs 4,000 billion, which will make the poor suffer.
07:52Doesn't this signal a complete failure to broaden the tax base?
07:57Because you will increase horizontal equity,
08:00you will also be able to reduce the burden on the poor.
08:02Who does not want to see real estate magnates or rich and rich agriculturists being taxed for a change?
08:08Western countries definitely impose the same tax of 40-45%,
08:12but they also give a lot to the people in the form of benefits.
08:15Here we do not get anything.
08:16So what will the salaried class do?
08:18Will it look for job opportunities in other countries?
08:21Or will it try to draw salaries in cash?
08:23What else will they do?
08:25You are right.
08:27But first, let me give a little clarification.
08:30Because I think it may have been misinterpreted.
08:34But as far as the salaried class is concerned, we have completely protected it.
08:39The threshold is fixed at Rs 6 lakhs.
08:47And the maximum bracket of the salaried class is also fixed at Rs 35 lakhs.
08:53So it is possible that it is being mixed up with the non-salaried class,
08:59where the maximum slab is suggested to be 45%.
09:03So as far as the salaried class is concerned, there is actually no change.
09:07In between slabs, there is a slight change.
09:14But there is actually minimal impact for the salaried class.
09:18So I just wanted to be absolutely clear that we have completely protected it.
09:25So it is possible that there may have been a mistake in our communication.
09:28But I just wanted to...
09:30It's good that you asked this question because it gives clarity.
09:34Thank you for clarifying that, sir.
09:36Sir, in this condition of emergency,
09:39increasing the salaries of government employees by 22% or 25%,
09:43the provinces will also follow the centre.
09:46So you will have surpluses of the provinces.
09:49But this one step that you are going to take,
09:52this is going to be an additional burden of Rs 1 trillion.
09:56Minimum on public spending.
09:58So does any institution increase the salaries of its employees during financial distress?
10:05See, Meher, this is also a very pertinent question of yours.
10:09I see it from two perspectives.
10:12One is the short-term fix.
10:16The short-term fix was that,
10:18Alhamdulillah, inflation has come to 12% in May.
10:22But the average inflation has been in the 23% to 24% range.
10:26So we had to make the government employees whole
10:31for just the inflationary impact on their purchasing power.
10:37So that's one part of it.
10:39But your question is absolutely correct.
10:42Because we have to find a structural solution to this.
10:45Like I will give you another example on a lighter note.
10:50Cabinet colleagues said that they will not take their salaries.
10:55So this is a good thing that we have said this.
11:00But is it going to make a dent into the government expenditures?
11:03The answer is no.
11:04Symbolically, this is a very good thing.
11:06Similarly, this salary thing is to just compensate them for the inflationary trend.
11:12The real thing that we are going to do and are doing,
11:16Meher, this is a very important thing,
11:18that we have to remove the government from every business.
11:23We are going to get more and more things in the hands of the private sector.
11:30And in this, I will tell you that the Prime Minister has just taken a step
11:38in announcing the closure of PWD.
11:41We can all argue about this.
11:45Because you started with the salary.
11:47That they have such a big salary bill,
11:50that even if the department is shut down,
11:53how much will it make a difference?
11:56And that will also be true for you,
11:58that how much will it make a difference in terms of salary and whatever else they get.
12:01The answer is the larger thing that they were involved in.
12:07It is not that the government can bear the expenses of 2.5 billion or 3 billion,
12:12or the expenses of increasing their salary.
12:14Look at the number of projects and the size of the projects that they are delivering,
12:20or rather not delivering.
12:22So client service, zero zilch,
12:25apart from that corruption,
12:27and how much was given to them,
12:29how much was spent,
12:31that is the real cost to the exchequer.
12:34While we are focusing on whether the salary has increased or not,
12:37that is the real cost to the exchequer.
12:40So that is why I would request you to give us a few months,
12:44because now a committee has been formed,
12:46which the Prime Minister has prepared,
12:48and ministers will be involved in it.
12:50They have given two and a half months,
12:53that all the ministries of the government,
12:56and especially the devolved subjects,
13:01why should we not close them?
13:05And if we close them,
13:07then we will not only see their direct cost,
13:10but the indirect element of it,
13:13because of which there is inefficiency,
13:15because of which there is corruption,
13:17keeping that in mind,
13:20we should close these departments.
13:23The real delta will come from there.
13:26You mentioned the inflationary impact on government employees,
13:29the whole country will also suffer from this inflationary impact.
13:32Now there is a government of loyalty,
13:33700-800 billion,
13:34how will they reduce their expenses and expenses annually?
13:37You mentioned the duplicate departments,
13:39for instance education,
13:41but again, I will tell you as an example,
13:43there are 18 such regulatory bodies in our country,
13:46in which bureaucracy is drawing double salaries.
13:49For instance, the Intellectual Property Organization of Pakistan,
13:524-5 government employees are sitting in it as board members.
13:56They all draw double salaries.
13:58There are costs to be optimized right here.
14:01OGDCL is another example,
14:02largest, most profitable company.
14:04It also has federal secretaries,
14:05same with the Bank of Khyber, etc.
14:07I mean there are many examples.
14:08There are 18 such,
14:09they are drawing double salaries as federal secretaries,
14:11as board members,
14:12and there is no real capability in the field,
14:14there is no accountability in the field regarding the results,
14:17yet they are being paid twice as board members.
14:19So, there is only one pocket,
14:20from which this money is coming out.
14:23Look Meher,
14:24you know many things better than me,
14:28because you have been covering this much longer.
14:30I have just come from the private sector,
14:32I am in my fourth month in the role.
14:35So, what you are saying,
14:36I can only agree with you.
14:38And on that,
14:39if you have heard the budget speech,
14:42then on the guidance of Wazir Azam,
14:45the first thing is,
14:47the number of government nominees on various boards.
14:52On that, I think,
14:53as far as I know,
14:55under the rules of the CCP,
14:57there is already a cap.
14:59But they have also said,
15:01that the government nominees that go on these various boards,
15:05their remuneration,
15:07a threshold will be set on that.
15:10And above that threshold,
15:13for example,
15:14these boards give them remuneration,
15:17those will go straight into the exchequer.
15:20These are small things.
15:22But these are very,
15:24very important steps,
15:26in terms of getting the governance right.
15:28That is why I told you,
15:30when you will talk to Avesh Lagari,
15:33it has taken him a little while,
15:37that all the boards of the Disco Board are changing.
15:43In that, you will see that the private sector professionals
15:46are going to dominate these boards.
15:48And in most of the cases,
15:50the chairpersons are going to be from the private sector.
15:53I would say that this is going to be a big revolution.
15:57But this is how we are going to start chipping away, Meher.
16:01Absolutely, sir.
16:02Because this is a low-hanging fruit,
16:03which can be achieved in less than two and a half months.
16:06Sir, this is a very big question.
16:08Can you imagine that the tax to GDP of the loyal government
16:11will increase so much in the next ten years,
16:13ten years,
16:14that we will be able to revisit the NFC award
16:16without ending our deficit and loss?
16:19Because the government did not make the NFC for the next award.
16:22And even after so many months,
16:24this conversation did not take place?
16:26So, look,
16:28I have given a summary of it today,
16:31in the budget speech,
16:33where we have started the discussion from the very early stages,
16:39around a national fiscal pact.
16:42And in that,
16:43what the federation has to do,
16:45the federation has to do,
16:46we have to do it as the federal government.
16:48And in that,
16:49the first thing I am saying is that
16:50why have we kept these ministries as the devolved subjects?
16:52Similarly,
16:53our request to them is that
16:56where there should be an incentivization
16:59to increase further revenues,
17:01because there are some matters
17:02which are provincial subjects,
17:03we cannot take unilateral decisions in that.
17:06So, this initial discussion has started with the Chief Minister.
17:11Also, in terms of the expenditures,
17:14what can be said about them?
17:18Look, Meher,
17:19I speak very simply
17:20because I have come from the private sector.
17:22And I have said this before in a program,
17:25and I have said this again and again in the budget speech,
17:30although I had to increase my pitch a little
17:34because of our friends on the opposition benches.
17:39But the point is that
17:41we will have to take all stakeholders along with us.
17:45Because it has to be through enterprise thinking.
17:48This is not just about English.
17:50The point is that if we say that
17:52we are riding in one boat,
17:55and you tell me not to talk to me,
17:59just see because the whole is on your side of the boat.
18:04When unfortunately,
18:06or God forbid,
18:07the entire boat is going to sink.
18:09So, this is such a thing that we are stuck.
18:14And this is not something like that.
18:16Pakistan is not such a country.
18:17In the advanced countries as well,
18:19Meher, you know it better than me,
18:21Australia also struggles with this
18:24between the federal government and the provinces.
18:27So, this is not something where there is dialogue.
18:30Yes, tell me.
18:31Sir, you are saying that
18:32you cannot take unilateral decisions in provincial subjects.
18:36And theoretically, that sounds fine.
18:38But no property tax is collected in the provinces.
18:40Last year, only 8 billion rupees were collected.
18:42Why doesn't the loyal government say
18:44that these topics should be given to the provinces?
18:48Because you say you cannot do it unilaterally.
18:51But real estate, agriculture are provincial subjects.
18:53But sir, Punjab, Sindh and Balochistan
18:55are under your jurisdiction, right?
18:57Mr. Shabashiri's niece is in Punjab.
18:59Mr. Mariam is there.
19:00They are not using their tax powers.
19:02They might as well surrender to the federal government.
19:04And if they do not want to levy any agricultural tax or real estate,
19:08if you cannot give them incentives,
19:10then take this power from them.
19:12Yes, I think,
19:14I will just say that
19:17these are such subjects
19:19where we will request the provinces
19:23to be incentivized.
19:25That they should increase in this area.
19:30And ultimately,
19:32as a sovereign, we will have to increase.
19:35Because, look, I just say that
19:38right now,
19:40a certain percentage of whatever we collect
19:43goes to the provinces.
19:45This year, you have increased the revenue by 30%.
19:48Next year, you are going to increase it by 38%.
19:51And we are going to increase it.
19:53And, God willing, we will complete it.
19:55But if there is room in the provinces,
20:01if we do not realize its full potential,
20:06then the sustainability that I am talking about,
20:10to take tax to GDP ratio for the country,
20:13not the federal government, not for FVR,
20:16for the country,
20:17where we can be part of a committee of nations
20:20or at least make a start
20:23to be part of the committee of nations,
20:26that 13-13.5% should be given.
20:28We cannot do this alone on the federal government.
20:31We will have to work together with the provinces.
20:34And even today, when we talk about primary surplus,
20:37unless the provinces deliver their provincial surpluses,
20:42we cannot go ahead.
20:44You are right.
20:46I can only tell you that
20:48the discussion has started.
20:50And we will continue this discussion.
20:53Okay. So that's good to know that the discussion has started.
20:55Because these are easy conversations to have
20:57given that you are a government.
20:59But sir, tell us,
21:00what is the logic behind the PSDP of 1,500 billion?
21:03What is the logic behind the M&A schemes of 75 billion?
21:06When we have to tighten the belt fiscally.
21:09Everything you are showing,
21:11unfortunately, goes against the principles of fiscal reform.
21:15Look, as I said in the budget speech,
21:19Mehar, it is very important
21:22that the projects that are already on the way,
21:26some have stopped at 50%,
21:28some have stopped at 60%,
21:30some have stopped at 70%,
21:32so 81% of this money is going to be spent on those projects
21:38which we have to take through the finishing line.
21:41Can you imagine that there is a project
21:43and it has stopped at 60% or 70%
21:47and its impact will not come.
21:50So we have to clear one thing.
21:53Apart from that,
21:54there are 19% projects which we are doing new projects.
21:58In that too, the National Economic Council,
22:02in which the Prime Minister chairs it,
22:04Chief Minister Sahiba and Chief Minister Sahiban are present in it,
22:10and there are some Federal Ministers,
22:12it has been made very strict criteria
22:15that which projects will be in the traction,
22:19which dams will have a high-level impact
22:24where the federation has to fund it,
22:29or these Mehar are those projects
22:31where for example World Bank, ADB, AIB,
22:35funding is available in dollars or foreign currency
22:39and we have to give it the rupee cover
22:46so that funding can come and these projects can move forward.
22:51So we have made it very strict.
22:53And the last thing I want to say is
22:55that out of 1500, 1400 is part of the PSDP,
23:01100 billion is that which is going to be through public-private partnership.
23:06And I again go back and praise the Government of Sindh
23:10that the way they have done infrastructure projects in public-private partnership,
23:15at the federal level we need to learn from them
23:18and move it forward in the same way
23:21so that the going forward of PPP,
23:23this framework increases and the public sector decreases from it.
23:29But at this time, this was the need of the time, Mehar.
23:32And Sir, this is a very big issue of pensions.
23:34The rapid increase in pensions that we are seeing,
23:36will the loyal government be able to fulfill these expenses and expenses in 5 years?
23:40And the way you have announced the pension plan for new employees today,
23:43you are basically following the pension reforms that were done 2 years before Khyber Pakhtunkhwa.
23:50But unfortunately, all the existing employees,
23:53the ones who exist right now,
23:55you have not talked about their pension funding and benefits.
23:58And if we can get tax on us,
24:00if we can get tax on this level,
24:02then why can't we get tax on the pension of the public sector employees, Sir?
24:07Yes, I think your question on pension is absolutely correct.
24:12I will just say that we are working on both the things.
24:18That too I have given a blind spot in the budget speech.
24:21I could not share the details because we are still working it out with the stakeholders.
24:27Whatever you have said is absolutely correct.
24:30The unfunded pension liability, I can talk about the federal government.
24:35This is a very big issue.
24:38This is a family issue.
24:40If we don't get on to course correction,
24:46and a lot of work has been done on this.
24:48I am not saying that I am talking to you very lightly.
24:54We have been working on this for the last 2-3 months.
24:58And you will see that we will take this forward.
25:04Because if we don't fix it, we have an unfunded pension liability.
25:11Absolutely.
25:12Number one.
25:13Number two, at least we can do this,
25:15that going forward,
25:17the loyal employees who are coming to our workforce,
25:23they can be taken to the contributory scheme.
25:26So that day one, their pension liability gets funded.
25:31And the third thing is that we have to take it towards a very professional pension asset management fund.
25:43Which we can outsource and take it forward.
25:46Whatever you have said is absolutely correct.
25:48Punjab took the first step in this.
25:52KPK has done the right thing as well.
25:56And I do think it's about time that at the federal level,
25:59we do the same.
26:00And you will hear the steps that we are going to take around this.
26:06Sir, because future employees will have zero financial impact.
26:09The existing pension,
26:11we had to see a reform on the burden of 1 trillion.
26:14But sir, lastly tell me,
26:15the government has asked for a loan of 7 billion dollars from China for the ML1 railway line.
26:20Will there be a forex generated from the new line so that we can pay more interest?
26:24I mean in terms of cost benefit analysis,
26:26this scheme is feasible.
26:28And is this the time,
26:30given our situation,
26:32when we should agree on more loans,
26:34given that this is already an IMF made budget, right sir?
26:39See, because there are many questions in every question of yours.
26:46I give you full credit for that.
26:49So see, the first thing is,
26:51let me tell you the last thing first,
26:53that we are very aligned,
26:55that the priorities of Pakistan,
26:58that's why I said yesterday as well,
27:01that this is Pakistan's program,
27:03Tax to GDP, Energy Reform,
27:05SOE Reform, Privatization Agenda,
27:07which is going to be helped, supported, funded by IMF.
27:11So we are broadly aligned on those parameters.
27:14Now let's come to our first question.
27:17So see, the tour of China,
27:20this was very much around CPEC phase 2,
27:23which is very much around special economic zones,
27:26which is very much around making sure that
27:29the Chinese industry should come here,
27:32and work in special economic zones,
27:35like the service long march project,
27:37or the export of truck tires,
27:40all these projects came here taking that kind of effort.
27:44As far as our infrastructure projects are concerned,
27:46we are still talking about ML1,
27:51Karakoram Highway, Gwadar,
27:55these are very much in the G2G context,
27:58but all of these projects ultimately need to generate
28:03enough effects so that we get back into a repayment mode,
28:09so that we don't get into that problem,
28:14or get stuck in CPEC phase 1.
28:17And I always say this,
28:20when we talk about IPPs and IPPs payments,
28:24see, CPEC phase 1 was all about infrastructure.
28:29It had ports, IPPs, power projects, all of that.
28:33Phase 2 was going to be about the monetization of that infrastructure.
28:38Like I said, the entire industry that was to come,
28:41that had to export, we had to make these repayments from those flows.
28:45That break that came,
28:48it has caused us a lot of loss.
28:50But going forward, Inshallah,
28:53as this industry starts getting relocated here in Pakistan,
28:56and we see some of these projects like service long march coming through,
29:01hopefully we'll be in a better position than where we are today.
29:05Thank you very much, Finance Minister, for being with us.
29:07We wish you the best of luck, sir.
29:08It is difficult times indeed.
29:10Guys, on Pakistan People's Party, will the budget pass or not?
29:12It seems difficult at the moment.
29:14What is the People's Party thinking?
29:16Stay with us, we're going to be right back.
29:25In this tough relationship between the Noon League and the People's Party,
29:27the Pakistan People's Party is making the Noon League,
29:30which does not fully understand its weight,
29:32realize today that without the People's Party, the budget will not pass,
29:35the government will not remain.
29:37The government's most important ally, the Pakistan People's Party,
29:39despite severe reservations on the budget,
29:41agreed to pass the budget.
29:43After three attempts from the government,
29:46finally Bilawal Bhutto Zardari supported the participation in the budget meeting.
29:49But Bilawal Bhutto Zardari himself did not participate in the meeting.
29:53Syed Khurshid Shah and Naveed Qamar from the Pakistan People's Party participated.
29:56Before this, the People's Party, after the meeting of the parliamentary party,
29:59Shazia Murray had claimed that the PPP will not participate in the meeting.
30:04And we want the government to fulfill its promises.
30:07PPP, government employees' salaries, PSDP, Zara, tax,
30:11and other agreements are not to be trusted.
30:15And on this basis, the decision to boycott the meeting was made.
30:18Khurshid Shah also complained that the budget proposal was not trusted.
30:22All four provinces should trust the budget proposal.
30:26The Noon League underestimates us and takes us for granted.
30:30But we are also a community.
30:31We also have to face our voters and face our consequences.
30:34We are a democratic community.
30:36We do not believe in blackmailing.
30:39But we should not be taken for granted.
30:41Whatever has not been entrusted to us,
30:44has not been discussed with us on the PSDP.
30:47There are things in the budget,
30:50such as the salary clause, agriculture, tax system,
30:54what policies will be there.
30:56Because we are in the same boat.
30:58If there is a loss in the budget,
31:00it will not be the PMLN's fault, it will be our fault.
31:02To avoid that, we want to be taken for granted.
31:06We will not participate in today's budget speech.
31:13We will talk later.
31:14Taimur Jhagda, former Minister of Treasury, KPK, is with us.
31:18Member of the National Assembly, People's Party, Sharmila Faruqi.
31:21Thank you both very much.
31:22Sharmila Sahiba, I will start with you.
31:24On what basis was Bilawal accepted?
31:27And why didn't Bilawal himself participate?
31:30Thank you, Meher.
31:32So far, Bilawal has not been accepted at all.
31:37Because the People's Party had an agreement with the PMLN.
31:42In which the PSDP of all four parties had to discuss with the People's Party.
31:47They had to get their information, which did not happen.
31:49And that time has passed.
31:51And after consultation, it was decided with the Parliamentary Party that we will not participate in the meeting.
31:57Anyway, when Mr. Ishaq Dar came to talk,
32:02as a token, we sent our three members to the meeting.
32:06So far, we have no intention of attending the meeting in the future.
32:11Now the ball is in the court of the government.
32:15Let's see what the government says about this.
32:20Because the violation of the agreement has been done by the government, not by the People's Party.
32:28But what are the sticking points now?
32:31You are right about trust.
32:33There should have been consultation on every level, which did not happen.
32:35But what are the sticking points now?
32:37What is the People's Party demanding?
32:39See, the most important thing right now is the budget.
32:42And it was decided with the PMLN that before the budget comes,
32:49there will be a discussion with the People's Party on the public sector development projects of all the provinces.
32:56The People's Party's input will also be taken.
32:59And the budget will be made with consultation, which did not happen.
33:04And unfortunately, that time has also passed because the budget has come today.
33:08So this is a complete violation of the agreement and that time has also passed.
33:13Now what happens next?
33:15How does the government joke?
33:17And what does our side talk about it?
33:21This will be told in the coming time, starting today.
33:24But it's interesting because now it's done, right?
33:27I mean, it was presented, so that boat left.
33:30But now there will be sticking points.
33:32Do you know about this?
33:34What are you trying to really renegotiate right now?
33:36See, there were some things in our agreement,
33:40where we had some agreements with respect to all four provinces.
33:44That too was not completed.
33:45That too is still left.
33:47What decision does the government make on it?
33:50How does it proceed with the People's Party?
33:53And there are still some projects, some discussions,
33:57which can still be included in the budget.
34:00Because the budget has not passed yet.
34:02See, we have a slogan in the budget.
34:05I understood, I understood Mr. Sharmila.
34:07Give me a minute here.
34:08But Mr. Jagra, People's Party seems to be in a prime position
34:11to elicit a pound of flesh right now.
34:13They will talk.
34:14Without them, the government does not stand.
34:16There is no budget, so the government also went home.
34:18What do you think?
34:19Is this just for optics?
34:21Or will they really be in a better position
34:24as compared to Tariq-e-Insaaf right now, of course?
34:29No, there is no doubt in this
34:31that they will take their pound of flesh to some extent.
34:34There is no doubt in this either.
34:36In the end, they will most likely play ball
34:39in what is a hybrid pro-plus-max regime.
34:44One thing that I think was said in the interview with Shazia Murray,
34:53don't take us for granted.
34:55See, PMLN has also taken the vote bank for granted.
35:01And traditionally, this has definitely happened.
35:04Let me tell you,
35:06when loyal governments make a budget,
35:09they forget that they have to actually engage with the provinces in Pakistan.
35:15And this whole budget tells you
35:19that a business-as-usual budget could not have been more than this.
35:24If there really was to be reform,
35:26then not just Sindh,
35:27but they should have sat with the KP government,
35:30with Balochistan, with Punjab.
35:34They should have laid out a platform
35:37that these are the government's constraints.
35:40This is how we have to go on an economic reform roadmap.
35:45The IMF gave a stick.
35:47They did what they had to do.
35:50What they didn't have to do...
35:52Okay, tell me, what should they have done that they didn't, Mr. Jagra?
35:55And do you think a political threat from Adiala jail
35:58is also too great for the government
36:00avoiding aggressive steps right now?
36:02Is it a political mistake or political stupidity?
36:05Yes, when you know that the mandate is not yours,
36:09it is someone else's,
36:10then how can you happily take difficult steps?
36:14Or can you explain this?
36:16What is the missed opportunity?
36:17You have been saying since evening that it is a missed opportunity.
36:19The government has given a budget with zero reform appetite without any major reforms.
36:23What do you want to see?
36:27The biggest thing you need is expenditure reform.
36:31In expenditure reform, the first thing is the salary system
36:35or the government system where two out of ten people work.
36:39What is the result? 25% salary increase.
36:42What is the impact? 1500 billion rupees across Pakistan.
36:45The second thing is pensions.
36:47The work has been announced in pensions, which KP did three years ago,
36:51but did not give credit.
36:53But this is the pension of those people
36:55who will be released today,
36:57after 40 years they will get a contributory pension,
37:00which today is a pension bill of 1000 billion for Wafaaq,
37:04or a pension bill of 2000 billion rupees across Pakistan this year.
37:08How will its financing be?
37:10For that, you and I will have to go 45% tax ahead of salary.
37:16If there is nothing else,
37:18the development budget has been announced for 1500 billion.
37:21You know, I also know,
37:23take the figures of the last two years,
37:25500-600 billion is actually spent.
37:27What will happen?
37:29They will allocate to their own projects.
37:32The KP projects that were taken out earlier,
37:34have been put back.
37:35They will not have fund releases.
37:38We do not even have the blackmailing ability that they have.
37:42Is there anything in the budget to increase exports?
37:45No.
37:46What did they do?
37:48The exporters who used to get a fixed tax system,
37:52they increased it from 1% to 30% or 45% in a year.
37:56Sir, but now 145 billion will increase further.
37:59The export sector was giving 90 billion tax.
38:01Now it will give more,
38:02but I am sure it will disincentivize a lot of things.
38:05But sir, they are bringing non-filers into the tax net.
38:09They have tried to bring non-filers and tax into the net.
38:13Do you give them credit for that?
38:16No.
38:17If they do, they will not give any credit.
38:19For now, 100-200 retailers have signed up.
38:23For example,
38:24there is no tax on retailers.
38:27It is being said that those who deal with them,
38:31they will leave the withholding tax.
38:35Look, in Punjab,
38:36the niece of the Prime Minister is sitting.
38:38It was possible that,
38:40and there are also allies in Sindh,
38:41I will also ask Sharmila,
38:42it was possible to talk about tax on real estate and agriculture.
38:46The bill of defamation that has been passed so aggressively,
38:49if they would have shown the bill here too,
38:51could it have been done?
38:53Because if this is not an emergency,
38:54then I don't know what will happen.
38:56Let's take both things.
38:58Real estate.
38:59Firstly, the way you increase property taxes in a wrong way,
39:04like they increased the capital gains tax,
39:06I think on property sales,
39:09on immovable property sales,
39:11they increased it by 15%.
39:14When you don't have the enforcement capacity,
39:17what happens is that the transactions will end
39:20and the transactions will be under the table.
39:23The tax system that you have,
39:26its implementation capacity should be there.
39:29You have to increase urban immovable property tax.
39:32I believe that this is a place where the provinces did not perform
39:37because it is an unpopular tax.
39:39This is the easy result.
39:41If you reform in Islamabad,
39:44if you put property tax in Islamabad at the level of Mumbai and Bangalore,
39:49the provinces will get an example.
39:51It is easy to criticize the provinces.
39:53They don't even do it in Islamabad.
39:55The way to do this is to put all four provinces together
39:59and say, look, this property tax system needs to be fixed.
40:02There is no need to amend the rules.
40:05But I know that when I was doing pension reform,
40:08no one else had to do it in the whole of Pakistan.
40:11So in the whole of Pakistan, the criticism was only on the Taimur fight.
40:14Sir, we just interviewed the finance minister.
40:17He did give PTI government credit for that.
40:19But sir, if pension reform does not happen,
40:21then we will have a problem.
40:23Because it's a recipe for accelerated accumulation of debt.
40:27So I am surprised that work has not started on it yet.
40:30I couldn't agree more.
40:34In fact, I am saying that the contributory pension
40:37that had to be made for new employees,
40:40I used to say in my province when my colleagues used to ask me,
40:45you see, we will do it, the rest of Pakistan will do it after us.
40:48Let's do one good thing.
40:50But now they should have gone beyond that.
40:53They are talking now that we will do it,
40:56the consultation is almost done.
40:58Now the people who are in the government
41:01or the pensioners,
41:03who will bear their burden?
41:05How will that be funded?
41:07Absolutely, sir.
41:08Mr. Sharmila, quick question.
41:10Because it is a matter of time.
41:11With such a big loss,
41:12what was the need for 1500 billion PSDP expenses?
41:16And now you will blackmail the People's Party yourself.
41:19Now you need the government.
41:21Somewhere or the other, sanity has to prevail.
41:23Under the 18th amendment, you do not even allow the NFC to be revisited.
41:27There are also partners in the government.
41:29But they don't even let you do the work you have to do.
41:32How will this matter work, sir?
41:34Look, the thing is that they think our decency is our weakness.
41:38It's not like that.
41:40The People's Party's agenda is not politics,
41:42nor do we blackmail.
41:44But the thing that was decided under the amendment,
41:47not acting on it is bad intention.
41:49This is bad intention and nothing else.
41:52And you talked about PSDP,
41:55it's absolutely right.
41:56And there will be a lot of cuts from this too.
41:58For example, this year's PSDP was 950 billion.
42:03It was cut to 746 billion.
42:0530% was cut because they had to show the plus of the primary budget.
42:09This will also happen.
42:10But look,
42:11we had to talk to us,
42:14ask us,
42:15and take our input for them.
42:18We might have given good advice.
42:19We might have given good methods.
42:21And then again, the thing is that,
42:23like the finance minister himself says,
42:25we know our problems, we know what to do.
42:27Then why don't you do it?
42:29It's absolutely right.
42:30Bring pension reforms.
42:31Tax the real estate.
42:33Tax the salary class.
42:36Increase GST, increase indirect taxes.
42:39What do you want to do?
42:40You will kill everyone.
42:42Things won't work like this.
42:44Keep taking loans.
42:45Look, as parliamentarians,
42:47National Assembly is the assembly that passes the finance bill.
42:51As parliamentarians, as MNAs,
42:52we don't know what was going to happen.
42:54We know nothing.
42:55We don't know anything.
42:56Thank you very much, Mr. Sharmila.
42:59You were saying that things can't go on like this.
43:02Mr. Jagda is calling it a reform agenda.
43:05Anyway, there is a tsunami of inflation for the people,
43:08whose waiting and waiting is now a must.
43:12Remember this in your prayers.
43:13Good night. Allah Hafiz.

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