continue this de fecto NFC award for another one year in case of failing to reach at any consensus.
To another query regarding holding no meeting of Council of Common Interest (CCI), he said that it was clear-cut violation of the Constitution, which binds the government to hold CCI meeting quarterly but three quarters have passed without any meeting of this Constitutional forum.
The IMF in its latest report states that the NFC remained crucial to the fiscal reform process, especially by Commission (NFC) award granted 57.5 percent of the divisible pool of tax revenues to the provinces, up from 45 percent in 2007 and 37.5 percent in 1997.
Although provincial governments, according to the IMF, are responsible for the delivery of a range of public goods and services, the mismatch between expenditure and revenue decentralisation leaves the federal government with a chronic deficit.
Furthermore, revenue effort at the province level is extremely low (generating only 7 percent of total tax revenues), despite the large tax base that falls under their purview including income tax on agriculture and sales tax on services.
While provincial governments have supported fiscal consolidation by maintaining budget surpluses, balancing the devolution of revenue and expenditure responsibilities is a key to attaining sustainable intergovernmental fiscal relations. In this context, the authorities will expand the scope of the upcoming round of NFC deliberations to cover all areas of fiscal management and seek technical assistance from international partners to support this process.
The critical issues for long-term fiscal sustainability across all layers of government are (i) revenue mobilisation by federal and provincial governments in currently under taxed areas, such as agricultural, services and property taxes; (ii) additional financing of high-priority expenditure such as education, health and infrastructure, and (iii) robust public financial management, debt management and procurement systems, the IMF concluded.