2018–19 Pakistan federal budget

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2018–19 (2018–19) Federal Budget
State emblem of Pakistan.svg
Presented28 April 2018
ParliamentNational Assembly of Pakistan
PartyPakistan Muslim League (N)
Finance ministerMiftah Ismail
TreasurerMinistry of Finance
Total revenueIncrease 5.159 trillion (US$32 billion)
Total expendituresIncrease 5.932 trillion (US$37 billion)
Debt paymentIncrease 2.221 trillion (US$14 billion)
DeficitNegative increase 4.9%
WebsiteBudget Brief

The Federal budget 2018–19 is the federal budget of Pakistan for the fiscal year beginning from 1 July 2018 and ending on 30 June 2019.[1] The budget was presented by finance minister Miftah Ismail on 28 April 2018, just months before the general elections scheduled in the country for the next government.[1]

The budget announced several measures; including an allocation Rs. 1,100 billion for defence expenditures; a ten percent hike in salaries and pensions of civil and military employees; a health tax enforced on tobacco and import taxes on cell phones; around Rs. 2.22 trillion were to be used for debt servicing; changes were made to the progressive taxation system, with no taxes to be deducted on people with annual incomes of up to Rs. 400,000; Rs. 25 billion were allocated for the health and medical sector under the Public Sector Development Programme, which would include several new projects;[1] tax cuts were announced for the agriculture and dairy farming sectors; another Rs. 2.6 billion were announced for the National Accountability Bureau, which include employee expenses; all provinces were to get a total of Rs. 2.59 trillion as part of their share in the federal revenues; Rs. 18.2 billion would be spent on the fencing of the Afghanistan–Pakistan barrier on the border;[1] Rs. 130 billion worth of additional levies were slapped on petroleum products;[1] and finally, smaller expenses were announced for setting up a media development and television monitoring system. The budgets for the President and Prime Ministerial residences, borne out of tax-payers funds, had also risen notably.[1]

References[]

  1. ^ a b c d e f "Here is all you want to know about Budget 2018-19". The News International. 28 April 2018. Retrieved 9 September 2018.
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