Fix the EFS
Export-led growth is the mantra these days, but government seems uninterested in actually facilitating it.
The Export Facilitation Scheme (EFS) was a well-designed initiative that allowed exporters’ access to zero-rated inputs—i.e., duty-free and sales tax-free—be it imported or local, as well as zero-rated transfers of materials between EFS bond holders.
However, in the FY25 budget, the government inexplicably withdrew the sales tax exemption on local supplies for export manufacturing while imports of the same remain duty-free and sales tax-free.
As a result, exporters procuring domestically manufactured inputs must now pay 18% sales tax. Although refundable in principle, only around 60-70% of the refund is issued after delays of over 6 months, as the FASTER system that promised automated refunds within 72 hours has been made dysfunctional.
The remaining amounts are indefinitely deferred for manual processing with no progress on these refunds over the last 4 to 5 years.
This further adds an additional administrative and time cost of 6-10 months from the purchase of inputs to the export of manufactured goods when sales tax refunds can be claimed—a burden that imports do not face.
All else equal, this policy effectively provides foreign industry and agriculture an 18-30% advantage over local industry and farmers.
The Federal Board of Revenue (FBRs) offers three main justifications for withdrawing the sales tax exemption on local supplies: that the sales tax is refundable in any case, that exemptions break the “value chain” in the value added tax regime and limits the tax authorities’ visibility over it, and that there were significant pilferage and leakages in the system.
The first argument—that sales tax is refundable—would have merit if the refund system actually worked. Rule 39F of the Sales Tax Rules 2006 mandates that refunds be processed within 72 hours, yet the system is fundamentally broken, and the FBR has shown no intention of fixing it.
As of FY24, over Rs. 180 billion of the textile sector’s liquidity was stuck in sales tax refunds alone. Beyond this, the government also owes the textile sector Rs. 25 billion in unpaid duty........
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