logo
Faceless, clueless, hopeless

Faceless, clueless, hopeless

EDITORIAL: For all the noise around digital reform and anti-corruption efforts, Pakistan's Faceless Customs Assessment (FCA) system has delivered the worst of both worlds: more bureaucracy and less revenue. A flagship of the FBR's so-called Transformation Plan, the FCA was launched with the promise of clean assessments and quicker clearances. Instead, it has grounded the customs system to a halt and bled the exchequer. An internal review, now leaked to the press, doesn't mince words: FCA is 'a complete failure to achieve objectives.' There's little to salvage from this wreck.
The review committee's findings should be an embarrassment to any institution that claims to plan, assess, or implement. The data is damning. Post-FCA, cargo clearance times have increased, not decreased — even though documentation requirements went down. More delays, more confusion, and ironically, more human intervention. Referrals to higher officers, lab test requisitions, and frequent reviews before Principal Appraisers and Assistant Collectors have ballooned. Far from cutting red tape, FCA has doubled it.
Worse than inefficiency is the abject failure to raise revenue although the entire premise of the FCA was that removal of human discretion would close the leakages due to collusion. Instead, Customs assessments now generate less additional revenue: 13 percent post-FCA, down from 16 percent. A three-point drop may seem small, but in Pakistan's fragile fiscal environment, it's catastrophic. The system was meant to plug a revenue hole. It made it wider.
So what went wrong? Nearly everything; the review points out that FCA's two core design choices — hiding trader information from assessing officers, and dismantling specialised assessment groups — had already been tried and abandoned two decades ago under PACCS, Pakistan's first digital customs experiment. The reason they failed then is the same reason they fail now: removing information from assessors limits their ability to assess correctly. Meanwhile, specialised groups bring expertise, institutional memory, and efficiency. Scrap them, and you're back to square one — except this time, with added confusion.
The rollout itself has been another disaster. Implementing an untested, unintegrated system in Karachi — the busiest and most complex port — without phased pilots or feedback loops was asking for failure. There was no integration with key databases like the IRS. No staged rollout in places like Lahore or Rawalpindi. And clearly, no plan for post-clearance audits to offset the blind spots of the faceless system.
The system's defenders argue that collusion needed to be stopped. Perhaps so. But if removing human interaction doesn't improve revenue, then either the collusion wasn't materially hurting the state, or the new system simply failed to stop it. In both cases, the FCA's core assumptions collapse. You can't hide behind intent when the outcome is actively harmful.
This isn't just a technical failure. It's a policy failure. The FBR and Customs launched a nationwide digital overhaul without the data to justify it, the testing to support it, or the infrastructure to sustain it. The result? Lower revenues, slower trade, and even more distrust in public reform.
The review committee has wisely recommended halting FCA's expansion. That's not a recommendation — it's a lifeline. If there's any will left in the corridors of power to do the right thing, this system should be frozen in its tracks. A full audit must follow — one that doesn't just patch the flaws but questions the very logic behind faceless assessments.
Pakistan doesn't need faceless systems. It needs accountable ones. Until we stop mistaking cosmetic digitalisation for actual reform, failures like FCA will keep repeating — each time more costly than the last.
Copyright Business Recorder, 2025
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Pakistan-IMF talks on tax-free sugar import underway
Pakistan-IMF talks on tax-free sugar import underway

Business Recorder

time10 hours ago

  • Business Recorder

Pakistan-IMF talks on tax-free sugar import underway

ISLAMABAD: Finance Secretary Imdadullah Bosal said on Wednesday that negotiations are underway between the government and the International Monetary Fund (IMF) on the issue of exemption of duties and taxes on the import of sugar. During the meeting of the National Assembly Standing Committee on Finance held on Wednesday, the Ministry of Finance secretary stated that one of the structural benchmark agreed between the fund and the government is not to grant tax exemptions/amnesty schemes. 'We are in consultation with the IMF regarding tax exemption on sugar,' he added. TCP cuts volume sought in sugar tender to 50,000MT The committee members also raised questions that whether additional revenue measures would be taken in case of tax exemption on sugar imports. The Federal Board of Revenue (FBR) has exempted Customs duty on the import of 500,000 metric tons of sugar and also reduced sales tax rate from 18 percent to 0.25 percent and withholding tax up to 0.25 percent on the import of commodity by the Trading Corporation of Pakistan (TCP) or the private sector. The FBR has also exempted three percent minimum value-added tax (VAT) on the import of sugar having quantity of 500,000 metric tons. FBR Chairman Rashid Mahmood Langrial informed the committee that the FBR has not moved any summary to the federal cabinet for exemption of duties and taxes on the import of sugar. The federal cabinet has taken the decision on a summary moved by the Ministry of National Food Security and Research (MNFSR). The FBR has issued the exemption notifications after receiving decision of the Federal Cabinet, Langrial stated. The FBR chairman stated that there are 54 percent taxes imposed on sugar including 20 percent import duty. There should not be such a high import tariff on the commodity. The prices of sugar at one time came down to Rs 130 per kg, he said. The Chairman of the Finance Committee, Naveed Qamar, was of the view that there is no shortage of sugar in the country. There are sufficient stocks of the commodity in the country. It is not clear what would be the rationale behind the import of sugar in the presence of ample stocks. The government should only be worried about the price of wheat which is de-regulated, but sugar is regulated in the country. Copyright Business Recorder, 2025

NA panel grills officials on sugar import
NA panel grills officials on sugar import

Express Tribune

time15 hours ago

  • Express Tribune

NA panel grills officials on sugar import

The National Assembly Standing Committee on Finance on Wednesday raised several questions regarding sugar imports and the provision of duty exemptions during its meeting chaired by Syed Naveed Qamar. The committee also took up various legislative agenda items, including the Parliamentary Budget Office Bill and a proposed tweak to Corporate Social Responsibility law. Members further questioned officials about a meeting between the government and the business representatives concerning certain budgetary measures. Addressing the issue of sugar imports, the chair asked for clarification from officials. Federal Board of Revenue (FBR) Chairman Rashid Langrial responded that the Ministry of National Food Security would be in a better position to answer. However, Qamar insisted that the FBR must have played a role. Langrial explained that the FBR had implemented the federal cabinet's decision to reduce the 18% sales tax and 20% customs duty on sugar imports. "Reducing taxes and duties on sugar lowers its price in the local market," he told the committee. However, the committee chair suggested that the government should withdraw from involvement in the sugar sector, because there was no shortage of the commodity in the country. Committee member Javed Hanif asked about the International Monetary Funds' (IMF} position on the sugar import. In response, Federal Finance Secretary Imdad Ullah Bosal said they were negotiating with the lender, adding that the government would have to implement the IMF's conditionalities. Later, the chair raised a query about the talks between the government and the businessmen on the issue of their protest. Minister of State for Finance Bilal Azhar Kayani replied that talks were held on Tuesday and a committee has been set up to find solution to the controversial issues within a month. Meanwhile, a report of the sub-committee on the corporate social responsibility law was presented in the meeting. While reviewing amendments to the law, the committee was told that the Securities and Exchange Commission of Pakistan (SECP) opposed the amendments. The SECP chairman informed the committee that these amendments would increase operational costs for companies. However, the chair noted that corporate social responsibility could not be left solely to the discretion of the private sector. The SECP chief said that the issue had come up only for oil and gas firms, but it was being applied to all companies. The finance secretary backed the SECP's contention, saying that "doing so would increase the companies' production cost". Committee Member Nafisa Shah pointed out that companies were already paying 18% sales tax and super tax, yet the Ministry of Finance appeared to object specifically to social sector spending. She added that while the law requires firms to allocate 1% of their profits to CSR, many were spending beyond that threshold. Minister of State Kayani suggested that the Finance Ministry and the SECP should bring their proposals after consulting with the companies. Committee Member Mirza Ikhtiar Baig said that all the chambers of commerce and industry and multinational companies were consulted on this law. The Finance Secretary requested the committee for some more time to consider the matter.

IMF-govt talks on tax-free sugar import underway
IMF-govt talks on tax-free sugar import underway

Business Recorder

time16 hours ago

  • Business Recorder

IMF-govt talks on tax-free sugar import underway

ISLAMABAD: Finance Secretary Imdadullah Bosal said on Wednesday that negotiations are underway between the government and the International Monetary Fund (IMF) on the issue of exemption of duties and taxes on the import of sugar. During the meeting of the National Assembly Standing Committee on Finance held on Wednesday, the Ministry of Finance secretary stated that one of the structural benchmark agreed between the fund and the government is not to grant tax exemptions/amnesty schemes. 'We are in consultation with the IMF regarding tax exemption on sugar,' he added. TCP cuts volume sought in sugar tender to 50,000MT The committee members also raised questions that whether additional revenue measures would be taken in case of tax exemption on sugar imports. The Federal Board of Revenue (FBR) has exempted Customs duty on the import of 500,000 metric tons of sugar and also reduced sales tax rate from 18 percent to 0.25 percent and withholding tax up to 0.25 percent on the import of commodity by the Trading Corporation of Pakistan (TCP) or the private sector. The FBR has also exempted three percent minimum value-added tax (VAT) on the import of sugar having quantity of 500,000 metric tons. FBR Chairman Rashid Mahmood Langrial informed the committee that the FBR has not moved any summary to the federal cabinet for exemption of duties and taxes on the import of sugar. The federal cabinet has taken the decision on a summary moved by the Ministry of National Food Security and Research (MNFSR). The FBR has issued the exemption notifications after receiving decision of the Federal Cabinet, Langrial stated. The FBR chairman stated that there are 54 percent taxes imposed on sugar including 20 percent import duty. There should not be such a high import tariff on the commodity. The prices of sugar at one time came down to Rs 130 per kg, he said. The Chairman of the Finance Committee, Naveed Qamar, was of the view that there is no shortage of sugar in the country. There are sufficient stocks of the commodity in the country. It is not clear what would be the rationale behind the import of sugar in the presence of ample stocks. The government should only be worried about the price of wheat which is de-regulated, but sugar is regulated in the country. Copyright Business Recorder, 2025

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store