1 / 34

Lecture 32

Lecture 32. Monetary and Fiscal Policy Instructor: Prof.Dr.Qaisar Abbas Course code: ECO 400. Lecture Outline. Monetary Policy B. Fiscal Policy. Monetary Policy. Monetary Policy.

oke
Télécharger la présentation

Lecture 32

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Lecture 32 Monetary and Fiscal Policy Instructor: Prof.Dr.QaisarAbbas Course code: ECO 400

  2. Lecture Outline • Monetary Policy • B. Fiscal Policy

  3. Monetary Policy

  4. Monetary Policy • Monetary policy is concerned with regulation of quantity, cost and allocation of money and credit in the economy. It is a mechanism, which has serious implication for economic development .It helps individuals decide the amount and place of investment, rate of savings and spending.

  5. Definition of Monetary Policy • The actions of a central bank, currency board or other regulatory committee that determine the size and rate of growth of the money supply, which in turn affects interest rates. Monetary policy is maintained through actions such as increasing the interest rate, or changing the amount of money banks need to keep in the vault  • http://www.investopedia.com

  6. Monetary Policy • Money policy in many countries has been kept away from direct arena of government. The government only establishes basic rules and eventual targets. However, in Pakistan many policy has been a much more government controlled and influenced tool.

  7. Monetary Policy • Interest rates have been pre-determined • Sector credit targets are defined • Market has not played an influential role The monetary management may be divided into two periods • pre-1991 period • Post-1991 period

  8. Pre- 1991 Period • Pre-1991 period • Before the 1991 financial sector reforms, the government’s management program was considered to be a loosely managed, highly unorganized system. In 1972, when the banking reforms were taken, a National Credit Consultative Council (NCCC) was established to determine the distribution of credit in the economy. • An annual credit was and still is devised each year to determine the extent of monetary expansion for the year. The government administered all rates of return and the whole economy had to accept them. It is far to say that Money Policy prior to 1991 worked fairly well and government had pursued an economic growth strategy : • By controlling interest rates • Directing credit to priority sectors • Obtaining cheap credit from banking sector

  9. Post-1991 • Post-1991 • From 1991 till today the financial sector has been in the throes of major transformation. The impetus to these drastic reforms is the World bank and International Monetary Fund.

  10. Recent Monetary Policy Framework in Pakistan • Objective(s) of SBP’s monetary policy is to strike a delicatebalance on inflation containment and maintaining/supporting economic growth. • Change in the monetary policy stance is communicated through adjustment in the policy rate – the overnight rate at which SBP provides collateralized cash to bank(s). If required, changes in the Cash Reserve Requirement (CRR) and Statutory Liquid Reserve requirement (SLR) are also made.

  11. Inherited Macroeconomics Imbalances • Government inherited large macroeconomic imbalances owing to expansionary monetary and fiscal policies, with them having spillover effects on the current account but without adjustment of the exchange rate because of large capital inflows. * - Low money growth in FY08 and FY09 was due to depletion of reserves.

  12. Recent experiences with monetary management: Inflation • After a sustained reduction, from 20.8 percent in FY09 to 11.7 percent in FY10, inflation has started to increase again in FY11, September & October in excess of 15.4% YoY • Most of this inflation is being contributed by food, fuel and transportation groups after floods. • The resurgence in inflation is attributable to a number of factors. • Reform measures (to dismantle past distortion/suppression of energy and oil prices) whose impact is being felt in the short-term. • Reduction in energy related subsidies. • Automatic pass through of increase in international prices of oil in electricity tariffs.

  13. Recent experiences with monetary management: Inflation

  14. Recent experiences with monetary management: Inflation Multiple Shocks/Factors • External-Increase in international commodity prices such as those of edible oil, wheat, rice, corn, etc. • Domestic • Food inflation (Prices of perishables increased by 48 percent during Aug-Sep,10 and have declined by only 6.7 percentage points in October) after floods (supply chain issues) • Crop Losses • Damage to communication infrastructure • Increase in transportation costs. • Hoarding and cartelization • Impact of expansionary fiscal operations to finance relief expenditures. • Government borrowings from SBP (Rs 184 billion since 1st July) owing to security & flood related expenditures and delayed receipt of external assistance and re-imbursements. • To contain inflationary pressures SBP has raised the policy rate twice since the beginning of FY11 (in July and September 2010), by 50 bps each.

  15. Recent Policy and Administrative Monetary Policy • Establishment of a Monetary Policy Committee (MPC). - A 9 member MPC chaired by Governor SBP with two external academic experts. - Minutes of MPC meetings along with votes of members (without names) on monetary policy decisions posted on SBP’s website, increasing transparency of monetary policy formulation process and SBP’s credibility. • Frequency of Monetary Policy reviews and decisions has been increased. - Instead of twice a year SBP now announces its monetary policy decisions six times a year. - This has reduced uncertainty and increased SBP’s ability to influence market expectations and respond to changing economic conditions in a timely manner.

  16. Policy Rate vs. Inflation in Pakistan

  17. B. Fiscal Policy

  18. Fiscal Policy • Definition • Fiscal policy is considered as a tool to control and adjust the human behavior which can be affected by incentives and disincentives provided by changes in government revenues and expenditure.

  19. Objectives of Fiscal Policy • Achievement of Full Employment • Economic stability • Resource Allocation • Mobilization of Resources • Equitable Distribution of Income

  20. Other Objectives • To increase exports and control unnecessary imports • To minimize dependence on foreign aid and achieve self-sufficiency • To provide inducement for saving and channel those savings into investment • To increase per capita investment

  21. Tools of Fiscal Policy

  22. Fiscal Policy in Pakistan • Fiscal policy relates to the government’s resource mobilization, collection and expenditure. The government requires funds to finance public investment and social development schemes and day to day running of the government machinery. • Taxes are levied on incomes, profits, goods and services, which enable the government to carry out their services. Fiscal policy also provides stabilization mechanism, which may be used to control and direct key economic variables such as inflation and unemployment.

  23. Taxation system • Taxes have a far-reaching effect on the economy. They influence savings and investment decisions in both private and public sectors. There are three major groups of taxes responsible for much of the revenue collected in Pakistan: • Income tax • Sales and excise tax • Taxes on foreign trade

  24. SOME SALIENT FEATURES OF PAKISTAN’S RECENT TAX SYSTEM • FEDERAL Income Tax • Heavy Reliance (53%) on Withholding/Presumptive Taxes • Progressive Personal Income Tax (max rate: 20-25%) • Corporate Income Tax (35% rate) • Universal Self-Assessment Scheme • Advance Tax Regime General Sales Tax • On Goods only • VAT features • Zero Rating, also of domestic sales of exporters • Standard Rate of 17% • Exemptions to basic food items, agricultural inputs, medicines, newsprint.

  25. SOME SALIENT FEATURES OF PAKISTAN’S TAX SYSTEM Custom Duty • Cascaded Tariff Structure (max rate: 25%; six slabs) • Tariff Peaks in Automobiles and other luxury goods • Share of Dutiable Imports (51%) Excise Duties • on few industries like cigarettes, beverages and cement • on Services in VAT mode • 1% Excise Duty across-the-board on manufacturing and imports B. PROVINCIAL Taxes • AIT, Land Revenue, Stamp Duty, Motor Vehicle Tax, Property Tax, Excises • Sales Tax on Services

  26. TAX-TO-GDP RATIO OF PAKISTAN2000-01 To 2009-10

  27. THE IMBALANCED SECTORAL DISTRIBUTIONOF THE TAX BURDEN2004-05

  28. Taxation system of Pakistan • Till date the taxation system of Pakistan is criticized on the following grounds. • There is wide spread tax evasion • The proportion of indirect taxes in the total tax revenue is very high. • The tax system is not elastic i.e. government revenues do not rise proportionally with rise in incomes.

  29. Taxation system of Pakistan • The need for reform in the tax system has been passing in recent years at government expenditures have increased and budget deficit is rising. • Fiscal deficit • The roots of fiscal deficit date back to the 1970’s.it originated to the eternally financed development spending in the form of investment by public enterprises.

  30. RECENT REFORMS (2008-09 ONWARDS) Carbon Tax • Introduction of Fixed Levy on Petroleum Products as ‘Carbon Tax’ with large revenue yield of over Rs 110 billion ($1.3 billion) Direct Taxes • Taxation of (Short Term) Capital Gains on Shares • Extension of the Withholding Tax Net (Bank Cash Withdrawals, Air Travel) • Introduction of Minimum Tax on Turnover (of 1%) • Random Ballot for Audit with Outsourcing to private Accounting Firms • Detection of New Tax Payers through Collateral Evidence Sales Tax • Enhancement in Rate from 15% to 17% Excise Duty • Introduction of Across-the-Board Special Excise Duty at 1%

  31. PROPOSED REFORMSIntroduction of Comprehensive VAT (or reformed GST) • Objective is to broaden tax base and reduce tax rate (17% 15%) • Elimination of exemptions on goods, except basic foodstuffs and life-saving drugs, could generate ¼% of GDP • Enhanced coverage of services (excluding education and health) could increase tax revenues in the medium term by 1½ % of GDP • Reduction in tax burden on industry • Introduction delayed till 1st October 2010 due to • ~ issue of collection by provinces of the sales tax on services • ~ lobbies (especially the trading community)

  32. PROPOSED REFORMSProvincial Taxes Areas of focus: • Capital Gains Tax on Property • Urban Immovable Property Tax • Agricultural Income Tax • The target in the on-going IMF Program is to raise the tax-to-GDP ratio by 3½ percentage points by 2012-13.

  33. References • Economics Survey of Pakistan (Latest Issues), Economic Advisor’s Wing, Ministry of Finance, Government of Pakistan • www.investopedia.com • Zaidi, S. Akbar,(1999),“Issues in Pakistan Economy”, Oxford University Press.

More Related