Economic Reforms

Pakistan Textile Body Welcomes FY27 Budget, Seeks FTR

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On June 12, Finance Minister Muhammad Aurangzeb stood before the National Assembly and did something Pakistan’s textile exporters had wanted for two years: he cut the advance tax on export proceeds from two percent to 1.25 percent. Forty-eight hours later, the Pakistan Textile Exporters Association called the FY27 budget “balanced and growth-oriented” — unusually warm language from a lobby that has spent the last two budget cycles describing its tax bill as existential. The applause came with a footnote, though. The industry’s oldest and loudest demand — restoration of the Final Tax Regime — still wasn’t granted.

The reaction fits a familiar pattern. Pakistan’s Rs18.77 trillion federal budget for 2026-27, presented under IMF-monitored fiscal targets and a four percent GDP growth ambition, handed exporters a mixed basket: a lower advance tax, an abolished Export Development Surcharge, and a sharply cheaper Export Facilitation Scheme financing rate. None of it touches the structural grievance that has defined textile-sector advocacy since 2024, when exporters were pulled out of the Final Tax Regime and pushed into the Normal Tax Regime — a shift business leaders in Karachi say replaced a flat, one-time levy with a system of assessments, audits and disputes. The stakes are large. Pakistan’s effective tax burden on exporters now runs to 68.27 percent, against a corporate tax rate of roughly 20 percent in Vietnam — the country Islamabad most often cites as the competitor it’s losing ground to.

The Final Tax Regime (FTR) was a system under which tax withheld on export proceeds — historically one percent — represented an exporter’s entire income tax liability for that revenue, with no further assessment, audit or year-end reconciliation required. Exporters were moved out of the FTR and into the Normal Tax Regime under the Finance Act 2024.

What the FY27 Budget Actually Gives Pakistan’s Textile Sector

For Pakistan’s textile sector, the FY27 budget reads less like a single sweeping reform than a bundle of smaller concessions, each aimed at a specific complaint exporters have raised for years. The headline measure is the cut to the advance tax on export proceeds, down from two percent to 1.25 percent. Crucially, though, it remains a minimum tax rather than a final one — exporters stay inside the Normal Tax Regime and still face year-end reconciliation, audits and the possibility of additional liability if their actual tax bill exceeds what’s withheld at source.

On the super tax, the government went further than most analysts expected. Aurangzeb told reporters at the post-budget press briefing that the levy would be abolished outright for “all exporters,” on the instructions of Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif. Separately, businesses earning between Rs150 million and Rs500 million annually will see the super tax scrapped entirely, while firms above that threshold get a cut from 10 percent to eight percent. State Minister for Finance Bilal Azhar Kiyani later confirmed that the advance tax cut and the super tax changes were the “primary demands” of exporters and the formal industry — and that the government had heard the concerns of business chambers across the country.

The Export Facilitation Scheme, the mechanism that lets exporters bring in inputs duty-free against future shipments, also got considerably cheaper. The mark-up rate attached to EFS financing fell from 19 percent to 4.5 percent, and the government layered on an additional Rs70 billion subsidy for the Export Refinance Scheme — what Aurangzeb described as taking the scheme “to a different level.” The 0.25 percent Export Development Surcharge, a levy that PTEA Vice-Chairman Ameer Ahmad had specifically flagged as a drag on liquidity, was eliminated entirely.

The budget reached beyond exporters too, in ways that still touch firms with international receivables. The Capital Value Tax on holding foreign assets is proposed for abolition, and the withholding tax on international transactions made through debit and credit cards drops from five percent to 0.5 percent — a change aimed primarily at consumers but one that also trims costs for exporters who routinely pay for software subscriptions, trade-show travel and overseas sourcing trips on corporate cards.

Taken individually, none of these measures rewrites the sector’s economics. Taken together, PTEA Chairman Sohail Pasha argued they would strengthen investor confidence, encourage business expansion and generate employment — benefits he said would eventually filter down to lower-income households. It’s the kind of statement that would have been unthinkable from PTEA a year ago.

Final Tax Regime vs Normal Tax Regime: Why Exporters Still Want Out

What Is the Final Tax Regime for Pakistani Exporters?

The Final Tax Regime (FTR) was a system under which tax withheld on export proceeds — historically one percent — represented an exporter’s entire income tax liability for that revenue, with no further assessment, audit or year-end reconciliation required. Exporters were moved out of the FTR and into the Normal Tax Regime under the Finance Act 2024.

That single change explains most of the noise coming out of Karachi, Faisalabad and Lahore over the past month. Under the old system, an exporter who shipped $1 million of fabric paid the withholding tax on that shipment and was done. Under the new one, that same withholding tax is treated as a minimum — the exporter still files a full return, still faces FBR scrutiny on deductions and input costs, and still risks a higher final liability depending on margins, financing costs and a dozen other variables that have nothing to do with the export transaction itself.

Businessmen Group Chairman Zubair Motiwala and Karachi Chamber of Commerce President Rehan Hanif made the case bluntly ahead of the budget: the 2024 shift, they argued, was a short-term revenue measure that didn’t account for its effect on exports, investment, employment or, ultimately, the revenue collection it was meant to protect. They called for the FTR to be restored for all exporters at a flat rate of one percent.

The arithmetic behind that demand isn’t abstract. Pakistan’s textile sector carries an effective tax burden north of 68 percent, once advance taxes, withholding obligations and energy surcharges are stacked together — a figure that dwarfs the headline corporate rates exporters compete against in Vietnam, Bangladesh and India. Energy costs compound the gap: Pakistani manufacturers routinely cite per-unit electricity prices roughly double those paid by competitors across the border. None of the FY27 measures — not the advance tax cut, not the super tax abolition — change that underlying structure. They reduce the bill. They don’t change the regime.

That’s the distinction the All Pakistan Textile Mills Association has been pressing hardest in its own 20-point budget submission, which goes well beyond the FTR question alone. APTMA wants zero-rating restored across the textile value chain, refund processing compressed to 48 hours under the FASTER system, and the discretionary power to suspend or blacklist taxpayers stripped from field-level FBR officers entirely. Its own estimate is striking: clearing the refund backlog alone could unlock $3 billion to $4 billion in additional annual export capacity — a figure large enough that, if even roughly accurate, would rank among the cheapest stimulus measures available to a government chasing a four percent growth target.

What the Budget’s Silence on FTR Means for Pakistan’s Export Pipeline

The government’s choice — relief on rates and surcharges, silence on the regime itself — lands at a delicate moment. The Pakistan Textile Council told Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif in a pre-budget letter that the country’s merchandise exports during the first 11 months of FY26 ran $1.66 billion below the same period a year earlier — a decline PTC Chairman Fawad Anwar called especially troubling given that global demand had, if anything, improved. His framing was pointed: stabilisation, he argued, isn’t the same thing as growth, and Pakistan’s next phase has to be built on exports rather than further taxation of the export sector.

Set against that backdrop, the FY27 budget’s selective generosity becomes easier to read. The government didn’t forget about the Final Tax Regime — it kept it, intact, for a different sector entirely. The 0.25 percent FTR on IT export earnings, due to expire on June 30, 2026, was extended for three years to 2029 on the prime minister’s direction, after the IT Industry Association warned that letting it lapse would threaten Pakistan’s bid to reach $15 billion in IT exports by 2030. The contrast is hard to miss: one export sector kept its predictable, one-line tax treatment, while the other got a rate cut inside a system its own representatives say generates exactly the disputes and delays the FTR was designed to avoid.

For textile exporters, the practical effect over the coming quarters will likely hinge less on the headline rates than on execution — whether the Rs70 billion EFS subsidy actually reaches mills at the 4.5 percent rate without the bureaucratic friction that has historically diluted such schemes, and whether the Rs327 billion in pending sales tax refunds start moving anywhere near the 72-hour statutory window APTMA has demanded. If refunds remain stuck at three to six months, the liquidity benefit of a lower advance tax gets absorbed almost immediately. Working capital freed up in one place simply gets retied in another.

There’s a financing-cost dimension to this too, and it compounds quickly. Industry participants describe textile mills as operating on EBITDA margins in the low single digits. At that level, the gap between paying mark-up at 19 percent versus 4.5 percent on EFS financing isn’t a marginal improvement. For mills running on tight contract margins with buyers in Europe and North America, it can be the difference between an order book that clears and one that doesn’t.

Textile’s relatively warm reception looks even more notable set against how other sectors read the same budget. The Pakistan Poultry Association said it had received no meaningful relief at all, warning that continued taxes on inputs — including a federal excise duty on every day-old chick and an 18 percent sales tax on processed chicken — would push up prices, discourage investment in modern processing and weaken food security. Plastic manufacturers voiced similar complaints about policy inconsistency. Against that backdrop, a sector that secured a super tax exemption, a cheaper EFS and an abolished surcharge came out comparatively well — even if its central ask went unanswered.

The Dissenting View: A Budget Without an Export Roadmap

Not every business body shared PTEA’s enthusiasm, and even among exporters, the welcome came qualified. FPCCI President Atif Ikram Sheikh acknowledged the macro picture had genuinely improved — GDP growth of 3.7 percent, a fiscal deficit down to 0.7 percent of GDP, and a 23 percent fall in public debt-servicing costs — but he was unambiguous about the FTR decision. He criticised the government’s choice not to restore it, arguing that converting the withholding rate into a minimum tax still leaves exporters inside the normal tax framework they’ve spent two years trying to escape.

Other voices went further, framing the entire budget as directionless on industry. Beyond textiles, business leaders across sectors offered only a cautious welcome to the budget overall, describing the relief as selective and warning that elevated energy costs would continue to constrain growth regardless of tax tweaks. The Businessmen Group’s pre-budget warning — that the 2024 shift to the Normal Tax Regime had already proven damaging to exports, investment, employment and revenue alike — reads, in hindsight, like a forecast the FY27 budget only partially answered.

Yet there’s a steel-man case for the government’s approach. Pakistan is mid-program with the IMF, revenue targets are binding, and a wholesale return to the FTR — which effectively caps tax liability regardless of an exporter’s actual profitability — is exactly the kind of revenue-narrowing measure the Fund’s conditions are designed to discourage. Cutting rates while holding the structure constant may simply be the only politically available middle ground between what the Fund wants and what the lobby is asking for.

A Budget That Splits the Difference

What the FY27 budget ultimately reveals isn’t a government turning against its export sector. It’s a government negotiating between two creditors it can’t fully satisfy at once. The IMF wants a broader, more enforceable tax base; the textile lobby wants the predictability that only a final, one-line levy can provide. Aurangzeb’s package splits the difference: real money moves toward exporters, but the architecture both the FPCCI and APTMA say is the actual problem remains untouched.

PTEA’s warm reception suggests relief, after two punishing years, is being taken wherever it can be found. APTMA’s 20-point list and the Businessmen Group’s renewed FTR demand suggest the sector isn’t done asking for the rest. Whether Pakistan gets its $3 billion to $4 billion in unlocked export capacity from faster refunds, or simply absorbs another year of 68 percent effective taxation with marginally better numbers, depends on decisions that never made it into this budget speech at all.

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