Punjab Budget VS KPK Budget - Punjab Govt Should Learn from KPK Govt

Kashif Rafiq

Prime Minister (20k+ posts)
The Punjab budget presented by Finance Minister Dr Ayesha Ghous Pasha was in line with several of Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif's policy thrusts in terms of expenditure priorities, prompting her to invoke his name a number of times during her speech. And, like the budget of 2015-16 did not reflect a proactive attempt to enhance its own revenue base and instead continued to place massive reliance on resources from the federal divisible pool and foreign support for financing projects. Ayesha Ghous Pasha, unlike her counterpart at the Centre, is a respected economist; however, the budget itself proves what has been consistently evident in this country over decades: a highly qualified finance minister is unable to formulate an economically sound budget due to political pressure which rises as elections near and is compelled to keep the revenue base contained while prioritising highly visible projects considered to be vote gainers.


Reliance on its own revenue by the Punjab government in 2016-17 is to the tune of 280,055 million rupees, reflecting a similar model as that contained in the federal budget: higher reliance on indirect as opposed to direct taxes. Direct taxes (sourced to the Board of Revenue) have been budgeted at 42,955 million rupees while total tax revenue is budgeted at 184,436 million rupees or 23.29 percent for 2016-17 while the rest of the tax revenue is from indirect taxes whose incidence on the poor is greater than on the rich. This heavy reliance on indirect taxes is pretty much the same as in 2015-16 with 34,519.521 million rupees collected by the Board of Revenue out of total tax revenue of 150,787.001 million rupees or 22.89 percent.


Sadly, tax on agricultural income was budgeted at 2.3 billion rupees last year while only 1.55 billion rupees was collected and in 2016-17 the projected revenue from this source is budgeted again at 2.3 billion rupees. Revenue from rent of agricultural land for a single year was budgeted at 780 million rupees in 2015-16 though only 172 million rupees was realised (an appalling 22 percent) but the budget for next year envisages 500.3 million rupees from this source prompting one to hope that the reasons for poor collections this year have been identified and would be dealt with next year. The largest revenue source under direct taxes (about 50 percent) remained mutation fees with 12.67 billion budgeted in 2015-16 and 10.25 billion rupees realised with the proposal to generate 13.5 billion rupees in 2016-17.


Sales tax under indirect taxes was the most 'vibrant tax' as per the White Paper and showed a collection growth of 38 percent in comparison to 2014-15 with the major rise attributed to the introduction of RIMS bringing 152 restaurants in its orbit. A further increase of 20 percent is expected in revenue from this source next year with cosmetic surgery, hair transplants, warehouses and cold storage to be brought within its ambit - from 62 billion rupees collected in 2015-16 to 85 billion rupees budgeted for 2016-17. What is relevant however is to compare this amount with the 144 billion rupees collected by Sindh under this head in 2015-16 projecting a rise to 166 billion rupees in 2016-17 with a one percent decline in the tax rate each year. Since 2012 when Sindh began to collect sales tax the standard rate has dropped from 16 to 13 percent for next year.


Expenditure in 2016-17, Dr Ayesha Ghous Pasha stated, would be more focused on development of social and physical infrastructure, with an envisaged rise of 37.5 percent in 2016-17. Social sectors that would be prioritised next year include education, health, agriculture, law and order and provision of clean drinking water - priorities that must be fully supported. However, she added that 168.87 billion rupees has been allocated for these priority sectors for next fiscal year and while this is indeed a jump in allocation yet, more importantly, it may also be a reflection of the benefits that can accrue from democracy given that Khyber Pakhtunkhwa led by the rival PTI has focused so much on education and health in its budgets. However, one would hope that due importance is given to improving governance in these sectors because without that there will be little to show at the end of the day. The KPK government has successfully focused on ending ghost workers and is proactively attempting to check any political interference in public sector appointments and these measures need enforcement in Punjab as well.


Budget outlay for agriculture, as was expected, was completely in line with the federal budget given the proliferation of reports that the Chief Minister Punjab had convinced the Prime Minister to introduce such a package to ease the rising concerns of the farm sector - provincial share of subsidy of 13.15 billion rupees as cash compensation, 7 billion rupees subsidy for fertilisers, Khadim-e-Punjab Agriculture Package of 100 billion rupees in two years and 27 billion rupees for rural roads.


Some populist measures included a 10 percent raise in salaries, continuation of the self-employment scheme that provides interest-free loans of up to 50,000 rupees, Punjab Skills Strategy envisaging training of 2 million youth by 2018, and an increase in pensions.


Punjab's government's debt as of 30th June 2016 according to the White Paper was 533.1 billion rupees which is 3.5 percent of Gross State Domestic Product "smaller in relation to the national GDP" and out of the total debt 3.2 percent or 17.1 billion rupees is domestic while 96.8 percent or 516 billion rupees is foreign debt.


However, most disturbing of all in the Punjab budget are the assumptions made prior to formulating the Punjab budget which in effect are the assumptions made in the federal budget: a growth rate of 5.7 percent, inflation 6 percent, Federal Board of Revenue to GDP ratio 10.8 percent and size of GDP at 33,509 billion rupees. These assumptions, if one reviews data recently painstakingly tabulated by Punjab Finance Minister's well respected spouse Dr Hafiz Pasha, are likely to be severely flawed given the fact that the macroeconomic data presented for 2015-16 by the Federal Finance Minister Ishaq Dar on which projections for next year are based is grossly overstated.
http://www.brecorder.com/editorials/0:/56735:the-punjab-budget/?date=2016-06-15
 
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mhafeez

Chief Minister (5k+ posts)
KHATTAK & KP`S UPLIFT OUTLOOK

By Ismail Khan | 6/17/2016 12:00:00 AM
CHIEF Minister Pervez Khattak must be good at gerrymandering in financial terms. You have to hand it to him. He is good at it. For how else would he have continued to come up with cooked-up budgets for the third consecutive time albeit with disastrous consequences for Khyber Pakhtunkhwa? Thanks to Mr Khattak`s never-ending spending spree, KP`s throw-forward liabilities have gone through the roof.

At the time when the Awami National Party-led coalition government was leaving office and the Pakistan Tehreek-iInsaf was taking over, it was Rs151 billion the project completion period being 1.9 years. That was in 2013-14.Fast forward to 2016-17, the tl5row-forward liabilities stand at a whopping Rs491bn the project completion period correspondingly having gone up to 4.9 years the permissible project completion period being 2.9 years.

It would not have been a problem, had the CM`s penchant for spending been matched with resources, or the spending done in a prudent manner at least that`s what one would have expected from the PTI. But no, that`s not the case. Under Mr Khattak`s stewardship, KP seems to have been afflicted by a malaise called the TMAS, that is, token money allocation syndrome.

Look at total number of projects under the Annual Development Programme for 2016-17 1,516 projects in all. Out of them 1,237 are ongoing and a paltry 279 projects are new. Even a few of 279 new projects have been allocated full amount to complete by the end of the next financial year. The rest will add up to the dump yard called the throw-forward liabilities the future generation will have to suffer and pay for.

Mr Khattak`s stubbornness to keep discretionary funds for his so-called Umbrella ADP`, yes there is an `Umbrella ADP` too, and his proclivity for spending thin on street-and-sewer-type projects, driven by his belief that such projects fetch more votes than the mega projects, has led to multiple problems -the TMA being the major problem resulting in the spiralling throw-forward liabilities that, hold your breath, nearly equal the total outlay for 2016-17.

Even scarier is the ever-ballooning pay and pension that now constitute 69 per cent of the artificially inflated total current revenue expenditure budget, thus leaving a mere 31 per cent for the development sector. If this trend continues, in the not-too-distant future, the province might resort to borrowing to finance its ADP. The first sign of this trend is visible in the ADP for 2016-17, Rs12bn for which will come from borrowing.

Considering the shrinking amount available for development, one would have resorted to prudent spending, spending the meagre available resources on macro development that would have had a wider impact aimed at bringing the under-developed areas on a par with the developed regions and worked towards improving socio-economic conditions of people.

Barring the few mega projects that is the only redeeming feature of the KP budget for 2016-17 the standardisation and improvement of all higher and secondary schools, provision of staff and equipment to all hospitals at the district and tehsil headquarters, Swat Expressway, rehabilitation of 50,000 acres of barren land and Gomal Zam command area scheme irrigating 192,000 acres of land and integrated tourism development schemes thanks to Imran Khan`s perseverance and persuasion to make a difference this time, the development in KP has largely been lopsided, Nowshera being the top beneficiary of the CM`s largesse.

But even this seems doubtful to accomplish if one looks at the receivables.

KP over-pitched its budget for 2015-16, by over Rs50bn, forcing it to cut down its ADP and revise it downwards from Rs174bn to Rs118bn. The story isn`t different this time too.

A quick look: net hydel profits for 2015-16 were projected at Rs17bn but revised estimates for the year put the figure at Rs 9bn. The projected figure for 2016-17 has been shown at Rs18bn. Provincial own receipts (tax) for 2015-16 were projected at Rs22.5bn, revised estimate was Rs14.3bn, and projected figure for 2016-17 puts the figure at 18.171bn. Provincial own receipts (non-tax): Projected figure for 2015-16 was Rs31.8bn and revised estimate (the sum collected) Rs11.16bn. The projected figure for 2016-17 puts the figure at Rs31.33bn.

The list is long. Even in forestry, where the government expected to raise Rs7.8bn during the previous financial year but was able to raise a mere Rs500 million, it has again estimated to raise Rs6bn in 2016-17. Under the head of miscellaneous receipts, including housing, the government expected to raise Rs14.3bn, but actually made Rs0.683bn. Still in the budget for 2016-17, the amount has been jacked up to Rs13.08bn.

But this isn`t it. The most ridiculously funny addition is the `Recoveries of Investment of Hydel Development Fund` in the revenue budget for 2016-17, projected at Rs15bn whereas the total HDF recoveries in terms of investment on hydel generation projects, according to the budget document, stand at Rs2.2bn and not Rs15bn.

The total HDF is Rs23.184bn and, as per the law, the government cannot spend the HDF on anything else but the development of hydel generation.

This legal glitch prevented Mr Khattak from spending Rs15bn, he has so eagerly earmarked in the current budget, still the budget for 2016-17 shows the amount has been spent, leaving behind Rs10.44 billion in the HDF kitty.

Juxtaposed against the revised and overly ambitious estimates for 2015-16, there is an overall shortfall of Rs44.635bn. This means if Khattak has its way with the spending spree, KP may brace for another cut on its ADP for 2016-17. Not a pretty picture for the chief minister and the PTI, which has been hoping to project KP as a model province to be able to win the next general elections.

The problem is that Imran Khan is stuck with Pervez Khattak and the chief minister is stuck with the PTl chairman between politics of hand pumps, street and sewer versus the real change that KP has been waiting for three years now.

http://epaper.dawn.com/DetailImage.php?StoryImage=17_06_2016_003_004
 

arafay

Chief Minister (5k+ posts)
Sadly, tax on agricultural income was budgeted at 2.3 billion rupees last year while only 1.55 billion rupees was collected and in 2016-17 the projected revenue from this source is budgeted again at 2.3 billion rupees. Revenue from rent of agricultural land for a single year was budgeted at 780 million rupees in 2015-16 though only 172 million rupees was realised (an appalling 22 percent) but the budget for next year envisages 500.3 million rupees from this source prompting one to hope that the reasons for poor collections this year have been identified and would be dealt with next year.

shame on punjabi league and laughable performance of punjab govt.
 

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