ISLAMABAD: The Islamabad Chamber of Commerce & Industry (ICCI) has called upon the government to take strong measures to curb smuggling as the economy was suffering revenue loss of billions of rupees per annum due to growing phenomenon of smuggling.
In a joint statement on Tuesday, President ICCI Ahmed Hassan Moughal, Senior Vice President Rafat Farid and Vice President Iftikhar Anwar Sethi said that a World Bank report had estimated revenue loss of Pakistan of $35 billion during 2000-2009 on account of smuggling, which showed that smuggling was causing huge losses to our economy that should be a cause of concerns for the policymakers.
They said that instead of levying new taxes, government should launch strong efforts to curb smuggling as it was a major hurdle in improving tax revenue of the country.
President said that many products were entering Pakistani market through smuggling due to which the business community doing legal business was also suffering great losses. He said an investigative study of Pakistan Customs on smuggling had revealed alarming statistics as it estimated that 59% of the total demand for products of over half a dozen sectors of the formal economy including petroleum, tea, mobile phones and auto parts industry was met through illicit trade of smuggled goods.
He further added, the Model Customs Collectorate (MCC) Preventive, Karachi had investigated 13 commodities prone to smuggling in Pakistan for fiscal year 2014 and concluded that 11 of them were badly impacted due to illegal trade. He said the same study had estimated that the share of smuggled tyres in Pakistan stood at 59 percent, tea 47 percent, mobile phones 59 percent, television 57 percent, auto parts 57 percent, steel sheets 10 percent, vehicles 12 percent, fabrics 17 percent, diesel 33 percent, cigarettes 3 percent and plastic granules 11 percent.
Ahmed Hassan Moughal said that the role of customs officials was key to control smuggling, but the corruption and bribery were major hurdles in such efforts. He said that many countries have curbed smuggling by utilizing latest technology and urged that the Government of Pakistan should also exploit new technology to cope with this issue.




