Accessibility

Accessibility

Website Zoom

Color/Contrast

Download Reader

The Sitting of the National Assembly has been adjourned to meet again on Wednesday, the 17th June, 2026 at 11:00 a.m. | Committee Meetings: 01:30 PM: Meeting of the Pakistan-South Africa Parliamentary Friendship Group (PFG) at Committee Room No.7 (4th Floor), Parliament House, Islamabad | 02:00 PM: 29th meeting of the SC on Interior and Narcotics Control (Postponed) at Constitution Room (2nd Floor), Parliament House , Islamabad | 02:30 PM: 29th meeting of the Standing Committee on Finance and Revenue (Revised Notice) at Committee Room No. 02, First Floor, Parliament House, Islamabad
Print Print

Standing Committee on Finance and Revenue meets

Saturday, 13th June, 2026
Islamabad, 13 June 2026: A meeting of the Standing Committee on Finance and Revenue was held today at the Parliament House under the Chairmanship of Hon. Syed Naveed Qamar, MNA. A team of financial experts presented the “Post-Budget Analysis of the Federal Budget FY 2026–27” before the Committee. The experts briefed the Committee on macroeconomic assumptions, revenue measures, expenditure priorities, development allocations, tax reforms, and the overall fiscal outlook.
Hon. Syed Naveed Qamar, observed that the Federal Budget FY2026–27 remains heavily focused on revenue generation and fiscal consolidation, while offering limited measures to stimulate economic growth, investment, and employment. 
 
The Chairman of the Standing Committee on Finance and Revenue, expressed concern over the continued practice of setting ambitious revenue targets despite repeated shortfalls in tax collection. He further questioned the rationale behind imposing additional taxation on citizens while simultaneously maintaining large primary surpluses and compressing development expenditure under IMF Programme requirements.
During the briefing, the Committee was informed that the budget has been formulated within the framework of Pakistan’s ongoing IMF Programme, with fiscal consolidation and achievement of primary surplus targets serving as the principal policy objectives. The Government has projected GDP growth of 4 percent and inflation of 8.2 percent for FY2026–27, while total federal expenditure is estimated at approximately Rs18.7 trillion.
The Committee was informed that the Federal Board of Revenue (FBR) has been assigned a tax collection target of approximately Rs15 trillion. Members noted that FBR has historically struggled to achieve its revenue targets and expressed reservations regarding the feasibility of the projected increase in tax collection. Concerns were also raised regarding the heavy reliance on enforcement measures rather than broadening the tax base through meaningful structural reforms.
The Committee discussed the requirement for substantial provincial fiscal surpluses under the IMF Programme and questioned the policy rationale of collecting additional revenues from taxpayers while restricting public expenditure and development spending. Members observed that excessive emphasis on fiscal surpluses may undermine economic growth and limit the Government’s ability to address pressing social and developmental needs.
The Committee also reviewed the composition of federal expenditure and noted that debt servicing continues to consume the largest share of current expenditure, exceeding Rs8 trillion. Members emphasized the need for a comprehensive debt management strategy aimed at reducing borrowing costs and creating greater fiscal space for development priorities.
 
 
During the discussion on subsidies, Members highlighted persistent inefficiencies in the power and gas sectors, which continue to impose significant fiscal costs on the national budget. Concerns were also raised regarding the effectiveness and transparency of various subsidy Programmes and sector-specific incentives.
The Committee expressed concern over climate-related allocations and noted that Pakistan remains among the countries most vulnerable to climate change despite apparent reductions in climate-focused development spending. Members emphasized the need for greater investment in climate resilience, renewable energy, and disaster preparedness initiatives.
The Committee further reviewed tax policy measures announced in the budget, including relief for salaried taxpayers, reductions in selected customs duties, incentives for exporters, and reforms relating to the property sector. Particular concern was expressed regarding the newly proposed retailer tax scheme where the Committee observed that the scheme could create distortions within the tax system, discourage compliance under the normal tax regime, and potentially erode the existing tax base.
The Committee also discussed issues relating to climate budget tagging, gender-responsive budgeting, worker welfare funds, non-tax revenues, and the utilization of levies and surcharges. The Ministry of Finance clarified certain methodological concerns regarding climate and gender expenditure reporting and undertook to provide additional details to the Committee.
Concluding the discussion, the Hon. Chairman observed that while the budget introduces a number of incremental adjustments, it does not sufficiently address Pakistan’s underlying structural economic challenges. He emphasized that sustainable economic growth requires comprehensive reforms aimed at broadening the tax base, improving expenditure efficiency, strengthening debt management, and promoting investment and productivity.
The Committee also approved the minutes of its previous meeting held on 25 May 2026.
The meeting was attended by Ms. Zeb Jaffar, Mr. Muhammad Usman Awaisi, Dr. Nafissa Shah, Ms. Hina Rabbani Khar, Ms. Sharmila Faruqi, Mr. Ali Jan Mazari, Dr. Mirza Ikhtiar Baig, Mr. Muhammad Javed Hanif Khan, Mr. Arshad Abdullah Vohra, and Ms. Shahida Begum, MNAs. The meeting was also attended by the officers from the Ministry of Finance and Revenue, Dr. Ali Salaman and his team of economic experts.