Abstract:
Abstract
This study raises policy issues arising from the fact that the present
tax-expenditure policies and institutional set-up at both the provincial and
local government levels of the Province of the Punjab are dated and need
revision.
There is now an active awareness within the Punjab Province that
substantial changes are necessary. The broad outlines of these required
changes which have been identified in this study, as follows:
i) The Provincial Government needs to recognise that the 1997
National Finance Commission (NFC) Award’s projected high level of
Federal Divisible Pool Revenues are unlikely to materialise in the
light of the substantial changes made in tax policies by the post
1997- Award Federal Government as well as by the depressed state
of the economy. As a result the historical pattern of Federal
Transfers covering more than 85 per cent of consolidated Punjab
Provincial and Local Government expenditures is unlikely to be ever
repeated. In fact the 1997-98 coverage of 75 per cent is likely to go
down even further and this gap needs to be filled by active resource
mobilisation and expenditure curtailment measures.
ii) The decline in Federal transfers has meant that the revenue surplus
(Federal Transfers plus own resources minus current expenditures)
available for funding the Punjab’s development expenditures have also
declined – from 75 per cent in 1996-97 to an estimated 13 per cent
in 1997-98. This gap has been filled (in roughly equal proportions) by
a massive increase in Cash Development Loan (CDLs) from the Federal
Government, Foreign Debt onlent by the Federal Government,
(primarily from the World Bank) and Draw-down of Provincial
Reserves. The first carries a market rate of interest (about 17 per cent
per annum) while the foreign loans (largely under SAP) carry
concessional rates of interest. Here the proposed strategy would be to
increase the revenue surplus, phase out the relativvely more expensive
CDLs and borrow foreign funds (through the Federal Government)
only on concessional IDA terms (i.e. 0.25 per cent interest, 50 years
repayment plus foreign exchange risk).
60 The Lahore Journal of Economics, Vol.3, No.2
iii) Debt service (on both domestic and foreign debt) to the Federal
Government is increasing rapidly (9 per cent of provincial revenues
in 1997-98) and needs to be monitored carefully. In addition
unfunded pension liabilities of the provincial government to present
and future retirees have the potential to create substantial problems.
The provincial pension scheme needs to be amalgamated with the
provident fund scheme (which is also unfunded since the provincial
government has used these employee funds) and turned into a
defined contribution scheme i.e. to a fully funded individual pension
account scheme. Otherwise pension liabilities which are about 8 per
cent of Punjab current expenditures and 35 per cent of Provincial
own consolidated revenues in 1997-98 are likely to reach
unsubstainable levels in the foreseeable future.
iv) The Tax-Expenditure structure needs to be rationalised between the
Provincial Government and the Local Governments. Tax collection
heads must be directly linked to expenditure responsibilities. The
Provincial Government should only collect and retain the following
existing taxes: (a) agricultural income tax, (b) ‘land revenue’
associated fees - primarily mutation fees - for transfer of agricultural
land, (c) stamp duties on urban-property and non-property
transactions, (d) motor vehicle taxes, (e) provincial excises and (f)
electricity tax. It should also introduce its own Punjab General
Services Sales Tax by adding it onto the proposed Federal Sales Tax
and have it collected for the Provincial Government by the
Federation. The last proposed tax would compensate for the taxes
proposed to be transferred to the ULBs/RLBs. All other Provincial
Taxes with the exception of the Cotton Fee which is used to fund
research should be abolished. All these tax policy changes, together
with improvements in the agricultural income tax, provincial excises,
electricity tax and non-property related stamp duties will ensure a
simple healthy taxation structure at the provincial level.
v) Provincial non-tax revenues can be increased substantially by
increased cost recovery and efficiency improvement from the
provision of community services and social services – particularly
health and education (which show cost recovery percentages of 3 per
cent and 5 per cent respectively). The economic services –
particularly irrigation – have a cost recovery factor of about 40 per
cent instead of providing a substantial surplus (or at least 100 per
cent cost recovery) since irrigation water is substantially underpriced
(currently about 20 per cent of the cost of tube-well water).
Shahid Amjad Chaudhry 61
vi) At the Provincial level, substantial efficiency gains are possible in
general administration, law and order (particularly the functioning of
the courts) and provision of community services including health and
education and economic services particularly irrigation. Reducing
unnecessary regulations will increase public welfare and reduce
administrative costs. The courts need massive productivity
improvements through revision of procedures and increasing the
costs of litigation which will only be adopted if ‘financial autonomy’
is given to the Provincial Judiciary. In education, the province
should stop expanding its infrastructure and focus on improving the
efficiency of its existing schools and colleges and introduce a
transferable voucher system (encashable in both public and private
institutions). In health it should deal mainly with curative medicine
(i.e. hospitals) which should have administrative and financial
autonomy. In the economic services increased efficiency through
user associations, cost recovery and expropriation of surpluses
through taxation in monopoly areas such as irrigation would result
in both substantial welfare gains as well as increased revenues.
vii) All taxes relating to the direct functional areas of local bodies ULBs/
RLBs/DAs – should be transferred to these local bodies and collected
by them directly. The major taxes here would be on: (i) Property
Taxes to be collected by ULBs and RLBs; (ii) Full Cost–Recovery for
provision of water supply, sanitation and waste disposal services (iii)
A new Local Government Petroleum Tax (to be collected by the
petroleum companies) which would fund new roads and related
infrastructure (bridges, elevated expressways etc.); and (iv)
Octroi/Export Taxes which would be used in part for funding the
maintenance of major roads but in large part meeting the needs of
the poor for slum and Katchi Abadi up- gradation. The Professional
and Calling Tax should be transferred from the Provincial
Government to the Local Bodies and be used to fund infrastructure
for the use of such professional bodies. The remaining existing local
government taxes are minor, save for nuisance value and extracting
rents, and should be abolished except when they serve as user fees.
viii) To meet these increased revenue/expenditure responsibilities the
ULBs/RLBs/DAs would have to be re-organised. The fundamental
administrative change proposed is that all major cities (i.e. Municipal
Committee and larger) should comprise a number of Municipal
Committees (which should be the effective urban management unit).
All areas developed by DAs (either in the past or the future) should be
converted into a municipal committee or a number of municipal
committees (depending on the size) and these should all be grouped on
62 The Lahore Journal of Economics, Vol.3, No.2
the pattern of Karachi into a metropolitan corporation with separate
mayors for each of the Municipal Committees and a Lord Mayor as
envisaged in the recent new Punjab Legislation. Thus all the Punjab’s
Municipal Corporations will become Metropolitan Corporations. The
Municipal Corporation as a tier is being recommended for abolition on
the grounds that it is too large and unwieldly as an administrative unit.
The WASAs should become an autonomous part of the Metropolitan
Corporation (shifting from the DAs). The DAs should be expanded to
cover more cities but also be subjected to more financial discipline.