PRIME welcomes major tariff reforms to boost trade, investment

By Our Correspondent
|
May 20, 2025
A cargo ship full of shipping containers is seen at the port of Oakland, as trade tensions escalate over US tariffs, in Oakland, California, US, March 6, 2025. — Reuters

ISLAMABAD: The Policy Research Institute of Market Economy (PRIME), a think tank focused on economic and taxation issues, has welcomed the Pakistan government’s move to implement major reforms in the country’s tariff structure.

Describing the changes as “long-awaited”, PRIME said the reforms represent a positive shift towards simplifying Pakistan’s trade regime, encouraging investment and reducing the cost of doing business -- key priorities the institute has long championed through evidence-based research and policy advocacy.

In a statement issued on Monday, PRIME noted that the government’s plans to phase out regulatory and additional customs duties, reduce tariffs and tariff slabs and streamline the Fifth Schedule of the Customs Act align closely with its core recommendations. These include findings from its recent publications ‘An Empirical Critique of the National Tariff Policy 2019-24’ and the joint ‘PIDE-PRIME Tax Reforms Report (2024)’.

The reports underscore how Pakistan’s complex and distortionary tariff regime has undermined industrial competitiveness, incentivised rent-seeking and contributed to misinvoicing and smuggling.

According to PRIME’s research, 71 per cent of customs duties are collected from just 10 product groups, while nearly half of all imports fall under exemption regimes. These issues have contributed to a narrow tax base and widespread economic inefficiencies. The National Tariff Policy 2019-24, though well-intentioned, failed due to a lack of consensus between the Federal Board of Revenue (FBR) and the Ministry of Commerce.

In contrast, the newly announced reforms offer renewed policy coherence by aiming to reduce exemptions, apply cascading tariff principles more effectively and support import liberalisation as a route to export-led growth.

The PIDE-PRIME Tax Reforms Report also stresses that lowering import tariffs -- particularly on raw materials, intermediate goods and capital goods -- can promote domestic value addition while improving government revenue by curbing smuggling and expanding the formal tax base. Import-related taxes in Pakistan, including GST, FED, WHT, and customs duties, currently amount to 46 per cent, far above the global average of 5.0 per cent. The report highlights Vietnam as a successful example of a country that has increased both trade volumes and customs revenue through similar reforms.

Welcoming the government’s announcement, Executive Director at PRIME Dr Ali Salman said: “This is an important step towards an open and competitive economy. I urge the government to institutionalise these reforms and ensure progress is not reversed by counterproductive measures.” He added: “These changes have been recommended in multiple reform reports. It is now the collective duty of reform advocates to monitor implementation.”