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"I don't want to withhold money they need, but I think we have to be clear that the Congress is going to be reluctant to give money if the money is filling in a gap because people are not paying taxes," he said. Earlier this month, the International Monetary Fund held back more than $1 billion of funding because Pakistan had not met a number of economic criteria, including reforming its tax system. The money is part of a multibillion loan Pakistan took out in 2008 to stabilize its economy. It's unclear if the IMF's tough stance will last. The organization has provided funding to Pakistan in the past when it didn't meet its loan criteria
-- a move that some Pakistani economists believe was driven by international pressure because of Pakistan's strategic importance. Pakistan had promised the IMF it would introduce a new tax scheme in July
-- moving from a general sales tax to a value added tax -- but ended up delaying it until the beginning of October because of disagreements between the central government and the provinces, especially Sindh province. Kaiser Bengali, a senior adviser to the Sindh chief minister who is responsible for negotiating the tax deal with Islamabad, said it seems unlikely that the government will be able to reconcile its differences with the province by the revised deadline. "I wouldn't do things simply because the donors are asking me to do it," said Bengali. If Pakistan does not reform its tax system and the donors fail to bail the country out, it is unclear how the nation would come up with the money necessary for reconstruction. The government has proposed a one-time tax on urban property and agricultural land not affected by the floods, but it is uncertain whether it will be implemented and how much money it would produce. Hussain, the former central bank chief, said that even if the one-time tax was implemented, he was worried the elite would simply use their influence to avoid paying anything as they have done in the past. "The system has given power to the thieves to monitor themselves," he said.
[Associated
Press;
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