While millions of hardworking Pakistanis surrender a significant portion of their meagre incomes to a punitive and imbalanced tax regime, the nation is haemorrhaging wealth at a scale that is not only alarming but unconscionable. In the past two years alone, Pakistan has lost over Rs 22 trillion to tax evasion— a figure larger than the country’s entire federal budget. This is not merely a governance failure; it is a robbery perpetrated in broad daylight by a syndicate of elite profiteers, abetted by bureaucratic inertia and political complicity.
The revelations made public by the Federal Board of Revenue confirm the scale of this institutional plunder. Through fraudulent refunds, ghost invoices, and unchecked under-reporting, criminal networks have siphoned off trillions. In one staggering case, Rs16.2 trillion was lost solely through fraudulent GST refund claims under the FASTER system. Add to this Rs6 trillion lost via under-invoicing, fake transactions, and non-filer activity, and the picture that emerges is one of economic sabotage— a parallel shadow economy thriving on state blindness.
And yet, who bears the cost? The answer is painfully clear: the honest, over-taxed salaried class. While only 3.5 million of Pakistan’s estimated 10 million potential taxpayers actually file returns, the brunt of revenue is extracted from corporate entities and salaried individuals— those easiest to surveil and least empowered to resist.
Attempts to reform this bleeding system— mandating CNIC-linked transactions, digitizing invoices, or widening the tax net— are repeatedly sabotaged. Every effort is met with protests from so-called “business communities” whose street power protects them from scrutiny. Let’s be clear: these are not grassroots uprisings; they are coordinated acts of economic blackmail, shielded by political allies and designed to preserve privilege.
The sugar industry, in particular, offers a vivid case study in state capture and fiscal manipulation. Earlier this year, the government allowed sugar exports of over 765,000 metric tons, claiming it wouldn’t hurt domestic supply. Almost immediately, sugar prices skyrocketed from Rs 140 to over Rs 200/kg. Then, in an astonishing U-turn, the government approved a duty-free import of 500,000 tons, ostensibly to tackle the “emergency” it helped create.
This is no accident. It is cartel-driven policymaking, where industrial giants— many of them sitting MPs— write and rewrite economic rules to suit themselves. This sugar import fiasco has drawn even the IMF’s ire for breaching fiscal discipline under the Extended Fund Facility (EFF). But far more importantly, it has crushed consumer trust and exposed the state’s moral rot.
The FBR, Competition Commission of Pakistan and provincial regulators have all failed to rein in these mafias. Demand notices totaling Rs 469 billion issued to sugar mills remain locked in endless litigation. Meanwhile, the industry earns Rs 1.5 trillion annually through sugar, molasses, bagasse, and energy production, while paying pennies in taxes— often less than their state subsidies.
The hour is late. The will of the people is clear. And the future of this republic may well depend on whether we choose to act— or choose to remain hostage to those who steal trillions and call it business as usual.
Recent crackdowns by the FBR— raiding mills, suspending complicit officers, uncovering hidden chutes— are welcome. But these are drops in an ocean of impunity. As long as politically entrenched families— from Tareens in the South Punjab to Sharifs in Punjab and Zardaris in Sindh— control production and policy, meaningful reform will remain elusive.
International models show what’s possible. Brazil’s NF-e electronic invoicing cut evasion by 30 percent in three years. South Korea’s digitization raised its tax-to-GDP ratio from 16 percent to 26 percent. In contrast, Pakistan’s remains stuck at a dismal 9.2 percent, trailing even regional peers like India (17.7 percent) and Turkey (23 percent).
Budget 2025 has introduced commendable reforms— invoice digitization, POS integration, vendor blacklisting— but these will fail without iron-fisted enforcement. Enough negotiating with profiteers masquerading as stakeholders. Enough treating tax evasion as a regulatory challenge— it is economic treason and must be punished accordingly.
We need full public audits of sugar mills. Real-time dashboards on stocks and sales. Criminal prosecution for hoarders and tax evaders. Protections and incentives for whistleblowers. A firewalled FBR, free from political manipulation, must lead this charge. Above all, we need political courage— an end to the revolving door of office and industry.
This is not merely about plugging fiscal holes— it’s about restoring the moral fabric of governance. Every rupee evaded is a school unbuilt, a hospital unequipped, a road unrepaired. It’s the pensioner choosing between medicine and groceries. The teacher whose salary won’t stretch. The farmer watching prices soar while cartels profit.
This is not just a sugar crisis. It is not merely a fiscal failure. It is a wholesale collapse of justice, a betrayal of the common citizen whose hard-earned income is mercilessly taxed while billions are siphoned off through fraudulent invoices, fake identities, and sham businesses with impunity. It is a nation being bled dry in broad daylight by those who operate not on the fringes of the system, but at its very core— shielded by loopholes, political influence, and decades of institutional apathy.
Pakistan now stands at a historic inflection point. The choice is stark and inescapable: either continue to placate the powerful tax evaders and their syndicates, emboldening them to erode the nation’s fiscal capacity, or confront them head-on with every tool of enforcement, accountability, and justice available. This is no time for appeasement. Protests staged by those who profit off tax theft— masquerading as defenders of small business— must not be romanticized. They are a smokescreen for a racket that costs this nation more than any external loan, subsidy, or bailout.
The salaried class and compliant corporate taxpayers can no longer be the beast of burden propping up a parasitic elite. The tax base must be broadened. Digital invoicing, FBR reforms, retail documentation, and enforcement crackdowns are not merely administrative decisions— they are acts of national survival.
The bleeding must stop. The silence must end. And the robbers must be unmasked. For Pakistan to rise, the tax evasion syndicate must be crushed— not placated, not negotiated with, but dismantled with the full might of the law.
The hour is late. The will of the people is clear. And the future of this republic may well depend on whether we choose to act— or choose to remain hostage to those who steal trillions and call it business as usual.