1. Muhammah Saad-pak-Stu-Tax-Oped thumbnail-December-2025-APP

The latest statistics regarding Pakistan’s tax system suggest that progress has been made. As per the Federal Board of Revenue (FBR), it has registered 5.9 million tax filers as of October 2025, a 17.6% increase. Concurrently, the national tax-to-GDP ratio has hit the mark of 15.7%. These figures are encouraging indicators of statistical formalization, but a closer examination reveals significant structural deficits that undermine this statistical win. The focus on the number of filers has distracted us from the more critical metrics such as the quality of the revenue and the equity of its collection.

The foremost challenge to the official narrative is the “zero filers” phenomenon. As per records, around 40 to 43 percent of 5.9 million returns filed indicated zero taxable income. This suggests the growth in filers is not a genuine expansion of the tax base. Instead, it is a function of regulatory mismanagement. Irrespective of the income, people are compelled to file to gain a place on the Active Taxpayer List (ATL).  This has become a mandatory requirement to perform even day-to-day economic activities, such as maintaining bank accounts and vehicle transactions, to avoid punitive penalties. Therefore, citizens are filing to achieve formal compliance. This act formalizes the names but has failed to capture the economic activity associated with those names.

This structural issue accompanies a severe and deeply inequitable tax bulge placed on the salaried class. In the 2025 fiscal year, salaried individuals contributed a record-breaking Rs. 556 billion in taxes, a 53% increase from the last year. This amount came directly from the automated precision from pay-checks and is, reportedly, double the amount of tax revenue collected from the retail and real estate sectors combined. Concurrently, they also have the weight of double taxation: they pay in source as well as a huge portion of consumption based taxes such as GST, customs and excise, which adds to the burden significantly. It has placed an unsustainable reliance on the most transparent segment of the economy. The salaried class is already facing significant crunch of inflation, energy tariffs, and uncertain market conditions. Therefore, this inequitable imbalance is far from a viable long-term fiscal strategy.

For the ordinary citizen, this tax policy considerably amounts to increased payroll deductions without correspondingly increased public services. Salaried workers have already contributed Rs. 556 billion in FY2025, a 53 percent increase per/year, and more than twice as much as retail and real estate, but despite all this, essential spheres like public transport, municipal infrastructure, and service-delivery institutions remain underserved and overdue. As citizens observe their contributions increase with the major services at stress, it slowly undermines the belief in the system and turns tax compliance into a mere obligation instead of a purpose.

The operational bloat of the government sharply contrasts with its demand for revenues. Our federal cabinet, with its 51 members with overlapping functions, is one of the world’s largest cabinets. This oversized bureaucratic setup needs sustainment of its administrative expenses, which comes in the form of “regulatory budget” consuming a major chunk of annual fiscal outlay.

The revenue challenges of the state are further compounded by two major structural gaps. One, the informal economy, valued over $500 billion by some, is still outside the tax net. The treasury loses Rs. 1.5 trillion annually in possible revenue from the retail sector alone. Time and again, enforcement mechanisms prove to be insufficient. Second, over $21 billion in annual tax reliefs to various privileged sectors and classes systematically erode the documented tax base. Both of these gaps leave a chronic revenue shortfall, such as the Rs. 270 billion deficits in the first quarter of 2026 fiscal year. This, in turn, perpetuates a reliance on external borrowing.

A sustainable way forward demands a pragmatic approach that simultaneously treats the both, revenue and expenditure, issues.

The national tax strategy must pivot its vigilance towards improving revenue quality. This will translate into relieving the disproportionate burden on the compliant salaried class, while expanding the tax net. This expansion requires two key and immediately fixed non-negotiable actions. One, integrating the undertaxed informal sectors and tying them with national revenue streams. Second, a comprehensive and an equitable re-assessment of the $21 billion in tax benefits to be awarded to specific individuals, corporations, and sectors.

Fiscal responsibility is a two-sided equation. The government loses its credibility to put a heavier tax burden on people while its own expenditures undergo no checks and balances. Pakistan’s total federal expenditure budgeted for the current fiscal year stands at Rs. 17.57 trillion. With debt servicing and losses incurred by security-related issues, there is little left for public and social development works. It has become imperative for the state to rigorously review its own spending, cut non-essential regulatory expenditures, limit government and the cabinet, and reduce operational costs.

A credible way to fiscal discipline requires legislation. The government must come up with legal caps to ensure fiscal responsibility, limit the cabinet size, and merge the redundant ministries and authorities. This would ease the strain on the administrative budget. An independent commission to audit the annual tax expenditures would bring the political will to redirect the resources where and when required.

To achieve sustainable fiscal health, only encouraging statistics are not enough. It demands constructing a meticulously balanced system constituting a wide tax base, equitable shared revenue burden, and state expenditures are in check with the same spirit expected of its citizenry.

 

Muhammad Saad is a Research Assistant at the Centre for Aerospace & Security Studies (CASS), Islamabad. He can be reached at [email protected]


Share this article

Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn

Recent Publications

Browse through the list of recent publications.

The US-Israel War on Iran: Objectives, Strategy, and Escalation Management

Zahra Niazi
‘States tend to overestimate themselves or the benefits and swiftness of war, and to underestimate their opponents’ capabilities, intentions, or the costs and duration of war.’ If anything, the 2026 war initiated by the United States and Israel against Iran shall be remembered in the annals of warfare among the most visible manifestations of this dynamic.
The war, immediately preceded by the January mass protests in Iran, did not represent a sudden rupture but rather the continuation of a 47-year-long confrontation and a more intense phase of the June 2025 war.
The US Secretary of War, Pete Hegseth, defined the war’s objectives as being laser-focused: to destroy Iran’s missile capabilities and its security infrastructure, while ensuring that it could never develop nuclear weapons. Beyond these stated objectives, among the priorities on the continuum also lay the objective of regime change, with both President Trump and Prime Minister Netanyahu explicitly calling on the Iranian population to take over the government at the outset of the war.

Read More »

Marka-e-Haq to the Peace Talks: Pakistan’s Middle Power Status

On 7th May 2025, Pakistan’s military forces took the international security community by surprise when it demonstrated operational superiority against its larger belligerent adversary India with its rapid and coordinated response. The Four-Day conflict proved to be a watershed moment for Pakistan, marking its rapid emergence as an important player in the region. In recent years, amidst the ongoing global competition between the United States and China, Islamabad has adopted a position of ’Strategic Balancing,’ where it maintains ties of cooperation with both Beijing and Washington. Deft diplomacy, emphasis on geo-economics, and credible conventional and strategic deterrence have remained the foundational pillars for Pakistan’s ambition as a rising middle power

Read More »

Debunking the S-400 Shield: Lessons from the India-Pakistan Conflict

Air defense has always been a central aspect of warfare. In South Asia, the phenomenon carries immense significance due to compressed reaction times. In this context, one of the most-hyped systems is the Russian-made S-400, touted by New Delhi as a one-stop solution to counter aerial threats from both Pakistan and China.
The 2025 conflict between India and Pakistan marked an important chapter in testing the S-400 technology. The conflict began on May 7, when India attacked what it alleged were terrorist targets in both Pakistani-held Kashmir and Pakistan proper, using drone and missile strikes. The conflict lasted for four days, culminating in a U.S-facilitated ceasefire. However, the brief conflict debunked a lot of the myths regarding the S-400 technology.
First, India claimed that the mobile S-400 would be able to control Pakistan’s airspace. In contrast, Pakistani aircraft continued to operate freely, according to official briefings by the Pakistani military. Although the Pakistan Air Force (PAF) aircraft were in their own airspace, they were still within the air defense range.

Read More »