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| Business Recorder – May 10, 2007 Medicines be made zero-rated supplies: ABC |
BUSINESS RECORDER May 10, 2007
Medicines be made zero-rated supplies
KARACHI (May 10 2007): American Business Council (ABC) has recommended that medicines should be made zero-rated supplies and Workers Profit Participation Fund (WPPF) be eliminated in its entirety. ABC considers corporate and welfare taxes as high. Rate of corporate tax is at 35 percent as compared to developing and developed markets. In addition to corporate tax, WPPF and Workers Welfare Fund (WWF) combined increases the rate to 42 percent for companies. Pakistan's tax rates, as compared to Malaysia, are higher by 25 percent and India by four percent.
ABC has, therefore, recommended that corporate tax rate be reduced to 30 percent for private companies and 25 percent for public limited companies. This will make Pakistan more investment-friendly and competitive with surrounding markets and increase the shareholders return. In its proposals for the 2007-08 Federal budget, presented to the Central Board of Revenue (CBR) Chairman recently in Karachi, ABC, while dealing with general sales tax (GST) on pharma products, has recommended that making medicines zero-rated will reduce the cost of production and consumer prices ultimately.
The other benefit would be that foreign investors will be interested in setting up new plants and local industry will also be protected due to excess inflow of generic products. Similarly, the elimination of WPPF will provide manufacturing sector with a level playing field with its competition, attract more investors to install/expand their manufacturing operations, and utilization of funds in building schools/hospitals by the organization themselves will also facilitate government efforts in these areas.
Acknowledging that GST is the key to expand tax in Pakistan, ABC has questioned how to create a win-win situation both for government and registered sales tax payer because, presently, no incentive is provided to registered entity v/s unregistered. ABC has, therefore, recommended that incentives should be provided to the registered GST payers like rebate on utility bills, elimination of withholding tax on utility bills and audit exemption for two years. Sales tax rate for registered payers should be 12.5 percent and for unregistered 15 percent. ABC has appreciated the government's efforts to reduce the tax rate on salary in the 2006-07 Federal budget.
However, the effect of reduction was off stetted by the waiver of exemptions like house rent, utility, etc. It is, therefore, recommended that the government should at least revive the scheme of tax credits on gross income tax liability, which was valid till 2005-06. Similarly, marginal tax relief to salaried individuals should be provided whose salary marginally crosses one bracket to another. On the question of Federal Excise Duty (FED), the key points highlighted by ABC are: - True essence of levy of excise duty is to regulate and discourage consumption of items that are either luxurious or injurious to health such as alcohol and cigarettes. Government has implemented this policy by eliminating excise from most consumer goods - the most recent being toilet soaps and powder detergents.
ABC has, therefore, recommended that FED on shampoos, skin cream and shaving preparation items should also be removed, as all these items are neither classified in luxury nor dangerous product for consumption. On advance tax-sec 147, ABC has recommended that law should be revised (as was applicable before) whereby advance tax was paid, which was equal to one-fourth of the assessed tax liability. This would simplify and streamline tax process for good corporate citizens. On Presumptive Tax Regime (PTR), ABC says that Pakistan is the only country with this concept of presumptive tax. Since it is easier to administer, the government does not differentiate between whether the company makes profit or loss (PTR is applicable on every person).
Manufacturers cum importers do not have option to merge their corporate profits for the purpose of income tax. ABC has recommended that on income tax all should be taxed on profits only under Self-Assessment Scheme (SAS). Current process of audit should be continued for those entities whose accounts are not audited by the approved auditors, or option of normal tax regime should be awarded to manufacturers-cum-importers fulfilling a precept criteria (in line with what was done last year for large trading houses). Salaried class should be allowed deduction by his employer for the tax deducted on cash withdrawal, investment in funds, tax deducted on phone bills. This would benefit and help the government in making refunds to those individuals whose only source of income is salary. ABC is a chamber of US businesses in Pakistan and represents the largest group of single country investors.
It currently has 60 members - most of whom are Fortune 500 companies, which operate in various sectors of economy. ABC members annually contribute: over Rs 35 billion to the national exchequer, cumulative revenues of $2.5 billion, investment of over $1.3 billion, and employ around 26,000 persons directly and over half a million people indirectly. ABC key objectives for 2006-2007 have been highlighted as under: Level playing field: covering combating corruption and smuggling as well as transparency in government decision-making and access to information. Intellectual Property Rights (IPR): patents, copyrights, trade marks, data exclusively and counterfeits and effective enforcement.
LAW & ORDER: SECURITY --
De-regulation: specially for pharmaceutical and oil marketing companies, and -- Taxation issue: corporate and personal taxation including refunds.
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| Business Recorder – April 24, 2007 Pakistan poised to more drug export: Shaukat |
BUSINESS RECORDER April 24, 2007
Pakistan poised to more drug export: Shaukat
ISLAMABAD (April 24 2007): Prime Minister Shaukat Aziz Monday said that the government is taking steps to position Pakistan as the manufacturing and export hub of high quality drugs. As such, Pakistan is now poised to increase the drug export. Relevant regulations and procedures have been improved to bring them in line with the best international practices.
The Prime Minister was chairing a meeting to review pharmaceutical industry growth here. Shaukat Aziz said that effective intellectual propriety rights organization has an important role in the establishment and expansion of industries and manufacturing of products having internationally competitive quality. He said that the steps taken by the government including the establishment of an Intellectual Propriety Rights Organization of Pakistan, strict enforcement of laws and streamlining of drugs and patents registration process have brought about significant improvement in the pharmaceutical industry.
The Prime Minister said the plans to establish the Drugs Regulatory Authority have been finalized and its establishment will bring improvement in the pharmaceutical sector. He emphasized the need to promote high quality medical research in the country and said the industry and academia need to join hands to develop a culture of research and capacity for it in the country. The Prime Minister asked the Ministry of Health to come up with a complete plan to initiate (R&D) activities in the country.
He said that the health ministry and pharmaceutical industry should work together for capacity building to promote research at the local level to attract funds for research that are available globally. Shaukat Aziz said macro-economic stability and sustainability of the growth momentum have increased the investment potential of Pakistan. The government is encouraging more investment in the pharmaceutical industry and medical services and the sector will be further deregulated to facilitate its growth.
Minister for Health Muhammad Nasir Khan apprised the Prime Minister of the steps taken by the Ministry to facilitate investment, streamline the registration of patents and encourage further expansion and growth of the industry. The meeting was attended among others by president of American Business Council (ABC) and chairman of MD Parke-Davis (Pfizer), chairman of ABC Pharmaceutical Sub-Committee and MD Wyeth Arshad Rahmin Khan, chairman of ABC IPR Sub-Committee and MD Merck Sharp and senior officials.
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| Dawn – April 24, 2007 Drug regulatory authority to be set up soon |
DAWN April 24, 2007
Drug regulatory authority to be set up soon
ISLAMABAD, April 23: Prime Minister Shaukat Aziz said on Monday that the government is taking steps to position Pakistan as the manufacturing and export hub of high quality drugs. He stated this while reviewing the performance of pharmaceutical industry and implementation of intellectual property rights (IPRs) law. He said the relevant regulations and procedures have been improved to bring them in line with the best international practices.
An official announcement said effective intellectual property rights organization has an important role in the establishment and expansion of industries and manufacturing of products having internationally competitive quality. He said the steps taken by the government including the establishment of an Intellectual Property Rights Organization of Pakistan, strict enforcement of laws, streamlining of drugs and patents registration process have brought significant improvement in the pharmaceutical industry and Pakistan is poised to increase export of drugs.
Mr Aziz said the plans to establish the Drugs Regulatory Authority (DRA) have been finalized and its establishment will bring improvement in the pharmaceutical sector. He emphasized the need for promoting high quality medical research in the country and said the industry and academia need to join hands to develop a culture of research and capacity for it in the country. The premier asked the ministry of health to put up a complete plan to initiate R&D activities in the country. He said the ministry and pharmaceutical industry should work together for capacity building to promote research at the local level to attract some funds for research that are available globally.
The government, he said, is encouraging more investment in the pharmaceutical industry and medical services and the sector would be further deregulated to facilitate its growth.
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| JANG - April 24 2007 All efforts to manufacture quality drug: Shaukat Aziz |
JANG April 24 2007
All efforts to manufacture quality drug: Shaukat Aziz
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| The News - April 17, 2007 Pak economy far better than India: Ishrat |
The News April 17, 2007
Pak economy far better than India: Ishrat
KARACHI: Chairman National Commission for Government Reforms Dr Ishrat Hussain has said the performance of Pakistan’s economy is far better than India if compared in relative terms instead of absolute terms. Speaking at a luncheon meeting with the members of American Business Council on Monday, he said Pakistan’s exports were larger than India’s if difference of their size and population is considered.
“If our export today stands at $18 billion, theirs should be at $144 billion. But they are standing at $95 billion,” he said. Similarly, he said, Pakistan had been more successful than India in attracting foreign direct investment. “As we are likely to have received $5 billion as FDI by the end of this fiscal, India should attract $40 billion, but its FDI stands only at $12-15 billion,” he said.
Hussain said it was easier in the first three years of Musharraf government to get things done because there was no elected government. “We took many decisions in that period and implemented them very easily through ordinances,” he said. “Now the situation is quite different. It looks like a one-man dictatorship from outside, but the fact is that everything is discussed in cabinet committee and the cabinet. It also goes through standing committees of parliament and is debated on the floors of Senate and National Assembly, which takes a lot of time.
However, we have to respect the authority of the elected representatives.” He said the ultimate aim of the NCGR is to make the lives of ordinary citizens easier by ensuring better education, health and other services to them through reforms at the government level. The former governor of SBP said there are too many ministries and then these ministries have different departments. “In Islamabad officers keep holding meetings all the time to coordinate their matters, but that coordination is difficult to achieve. There is too much fussiness today; we need clarity,” he said.
“We have decided the areas of education to be overseen by different levels of government. Higher education is to be overseen by federal government, college level education by provincial governments and primary level education by district level governments,” he said. He said that there was need to replicate the experience of petroleum ministry in the other ministries. He said petroleum ministry had given autonomy to public sector corporations like OGDC and SSGC and had formed OCAC to decide prices. It is now concerned only with policy-making and in projects like IPI gas pipeline, he said.
He said the government’s only job should be to plan, make policies, implement and monitor their respective areas. It should not be involved in running enterprises, he said. The chairman NCGR said there were some commercial services being run by officers who were unable to compete because of government restrictions. He said there was no need to retain the civil servants’ groups of commerce and trade, postal service and railway. He said officers should be paid according to market conditions and their performance instead of grades.
“These things may have worked in 1950s, but you cannot solve today’s problems with instruments of the past,” he said. He advised the ABC members to form a group, which should identify problems companies face in dealing with ministries and make recommendations for his commission. President ABC Iqbal Bengali said the ABC members wanted the government to ensure protection for intellectual property rights, patents, and trademarks and eliminate counterfeits. He said the government must also work towards ensuring data exclusivity. He stressed level playing field for market players and said for this the government must eliminate smuggling. He said the ABC members advocate access to information and expect transparency in the government decisions.
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| The News - March 16, 2007 ABC wants Pak govt to do more to protect IPR |
The News March 16, 2007
ABC wants Pak govt to do more to protect IPR
KARACHI: The American Business Council wants the Pakistani government to do more to protect intellectual property rights and to attract investment in research, and to bring its corporate tax down to the level of other regional countries. President of ABC Iqbal Bengali expressed these views in an interview with The News in Karachi. He said American companies might look at the possibility of starting research in Pakistan if the government provided better protection to intellectual property rights. “There should be protection for patents.
There should be laws. Patents are violated. Nobody is going to invest in research in current circumstances. Even no Pakistani firm will do that,” he said. He said India was a better country in this regard as the authorities there are more supportive of patents protection. He said Pakistan should attract foreign investment because it has got talent and is more cost effective, only if patents are protected. “Pakistan should honor its obligations that it has under the World Trade Organization. There should be strong punishments for violators and cases should be settled speedily,” he said. He said the people working for IPO should be aware of the technicalities.
The government should educate lawyers about intellectual property and there should be special courts for cases involving violation of intellectual property rights, he said. “There should be special IPO tribunals. In this way the judges would be more competent, as they would focus only on intellectual property cases,” he said. He said the judges of the country were not as conversant with patents as they should be. The government needs to take steps to enhance their capacity with regard to patents, he suggested.
He said a possible attack on Iran by Israel or US would definitely have an impact on the US businesses in Pakistan, but it would be only temporary. “Anywhere a war does have an impact on businesses, but only temporarily. If economic fundamentals are sound, the economy soon recovers,” he said. He said Pakistan should look at reducing corporate taxes in a phased manner.
In the region it is ranging between 20 percent and 30 percent, but here corporate tax is charged at 35 percent, he said and added that it would send clear indication abroad and help attract foreign investment. “It all boils down to competition. Pakistan has to be competitive to attract foreign investment because every country is trying to attract foreign investment,” he said. He said the perception abroad is that Pakistan’s law and order situation is not very conducive because whatever they know is through television channels and newspapers.
But when they come here and go back, the have a better opinion about this country because the situation is not as bad as it is presented in the media, he said. “The government of Pakistan has got a challenging task. Not only it has to control suicide bombings, but it also has to curb the street crimes. Street crimes are a cause of concern for us, because if something happens to our employees, we are affected. All these things add up,” he said. When asked if he agreed with the latest World Bank’s statement that Karachi was a very business friendly city, he said: “Yes. Karachi is now a business friendly city, but we should think is it enough.
I think we need to do more to attract foreign direct investment.” He said Pakistan should have been able to attract a lot more foreign direct investment because it is the only country in the region that allows foreign firms hundred percent ownership and hundred percent repatriation of funds. But it is failing to do so because of its image abroad, which is only partly true, he said. He said there was an acute shortage of skilled workers in Pakistan. The kind of skills that we want in workers, we do not find, he said and added that the government must make efforts to encourage skilled people to stay in Pakistan and not go abroad. “Skilled people are not readily available. Even if we get them, we find it difficult to retain them because they prefer to go abroad. The government of Pakistan should improve the situation here so that skilled people should like to stay here.”
He said he had a firm view that the government should not dictate businesses and should let the market forces determine. He said that in the US the government does not interfere. “The governments should make policies and make sure the policies are followed,” he said. “It is not a long-term solution, if the government asks businesses to reduce prices. The government needs to find long-term solution.” Asked if he was satisfied with the infrastructure of Karachi, he said the infrastructure should be proper in any city. He said there is always a shortage of power and water in Karachi, which affects businesses seriously.
Traffic jams are a chronic problem. He said improvement was required in these areas. “We have generators, but even when we do get power supply, there is so much fluctuation that damages our assets. Then we have to buy water that we should not be doing. They (the government) say they are doing, but they need to do more.” About the economy of Pakistan he said its macro fundamentals were good and its eight percent growth for last few years was pretty good and not easy to achieve. The per capita income has increased from about $400 to around $800 and the number of people living below poverty line has come down to 20 percent from 25 percent, he said.
However, he said, the government needs to spend more money on health and education, which are the most vital sectors for any country to prosper. “Now they (the government) are spending on these two areas, but it is still not enough,” he said. He said the judiciary had its problems, because there was a huge backlog of cases in courts. He said that because of the huge number of cases that they have to hear, decision on cases are delayed, which affects their business. “The government should spend money to establish more courts,” he said. About the negotiations between the US and the Pakistani governments on bilateral investment treaty, he said he hoped it would get signed very soon, because the gap between the points of view of both has narrowed down.
When asked what the ABC members contribute in the education sector of Pakistan, he said they were not involved in education sector, but they provided technical know how to their employees. “The US government helps Pakistan for improving its education sector. Recently they (the US government) said they would be spending $115 million on Fulbright Scholarships for Pakistani students over the next five years,” he said. ABC conducts a survey every year to know about the opinion of our members about different government departments. The last survey showed that our members thought the performance of ministry of interior, ministry of labour, ministry of health and Intellectual Property Organization had gone down.
But the view of our members about performance of Securities and Exchange Commission of Pakistan, State Bank of Pakistan and Central Board of Revenue had improved. About the performance of provincial governments he said the members of ABC found the departments of Punjab governments working better than Sindh’s. Particularly, the performance of the police in this province is not satisfactory.
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| Pakistan Observer – January 19, 2007 American trade body meets Ebad |
PAKISTAN OBSERVER January 19, 2007
American trade body meets Ebad
KARACHI – Sindh Governor Dr. Ishrat-ul-Ebad Khan has said that while the government has focused on a development and uplift programmed for the entire province the city of Karachi, which a multiethnic city with & population of more than 15 million deserves special attention. Addressing the member of American Business Council of Pakistan at a luncheon meeting here Thursday, the Governor said the city had been without a Master Plan for the last 59 years and most of the development work had been done on and adhoc basis.
Since last one year, all infrastructures work in now being done in a comprehensive manner and a master plan being developed for the next 25 year to effectively cater to the needs of the growing population especially to facilitate trade and industry and encourage more foreign investment he added. He said proper infrastructure and law and order situation are our main priorities and they will be able to see significantly visible improvements starting 2007. The Governor said it is indeed very impressive that U.S.A is on top of the list for Foreign Direct investment (FDI) and has annually averaged 30% of total FDI for the last 17 years.
Also he said 44 of their 61 members are based in Karachi which is now named as one of world’s 12 mega cities. It is an honor for Pakistan that World Economic forum has invited Karachi City Nazim Syed Mustafa Kamal to attend the upcoming session at Daves he informed Dr. Ishrat-ul-Ebad said he is personally very keen to interact with all stakeholders and recalled that in December 2008 had invited the Members of their Executive Committee for a meeting with all top concerned officials of his government to understand their key issues and identify the status and plans to address them - APP.
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