Pakistan’s advertising sector is facing a quiet but critical liquidity crisis. Despite being a fully documented engine of economic growth, creative and media agencies are buckling under an outdated and punitive fiscal framework. In its budget proposals for FY2026-27, the Pakistan Advertising Association (PAA) has issued a compelling call to the Federal Board of Revenue (FBR) for an immediate overhaul of the tax structure.
As PAA Chairperson Ahmed Hussain Kapadia noted, the industry is not seeking exemptions or handouts. Instead, it is demanding a tax framework that reflects commercial reality, one where taxes bear a rational relationship to actual net income rather than gross turnover.
The Struggle of the Minimum Tax Regime
At the heart of the industry’s struggle is the Minimum Tax Regime. Currently, taxes deducted at source under Sections 153 and 233 of the Income Tax Ordinance, 2001, are treated as a minimum tax. This practice deviates from the law’s primary charging structure (Section 4), which only contemplates Normal, Separate, or Final tax regimes. By aggressively skimming from gross receipts without allowing for full adjustments or refunds, the state has effectively created a parallel, economically penalising system.
Even if this regime is maintained, it is full of contradictions. While Section 113 caps the statutory minimum turnover tax at 1.25%, withholding taxes on the exact same receipts are collected at exponentially higher rates.
The PAA is rightfully urging the government to bring agencies entirely under the Normal Tax Regime, treating all source deductions as adjustable credits against real corporate liabilities.
High Withholding Rates vs. Shrinking Margins
Furthermore, the current withholding tax (WHT) rates are simply unsustainable for an industry facing shrinking margins and rising operational costs. Commission income is hit with a 10% WHT, while service income faces a 6% deduction. Since these deductions are made from gross amounts, they routinely eclipse the standard 29% corporate tax rate on net income.
Combined with a lack of an efficient refund mechanism, agencies are left permanently over-taxed, losing their hard-earned liquidity to an inflexible system. To align deductions with actual profitability, the PAA proposes cutting the WHT on commission income to 5% and service income to 3%.
Eliminating the “Tax on Tax” Anomaly
Compounding this financial strain is a classic case of double taxation: withholding tax is currently calculated on the gross invoice value, inclusive of provincial sales tax. Slicing a direct tax out of an indirect tax amount, which does not even constitute agency income, creates an anomalous “tax on tax” scenario that drains cash reserves. The PAA is calling for immediate amendments to ensure withholding is applied strictly to the net taxable value.
Changing the Definition of “Advertising Services”
Finally, structural ambiguity remains a major roadblock. The Income Tax Ordinance completely lacks a modern statutory definition of “Advertising Services.” In this vacuum, withholding agents routinely misclassify diverse campaigns under unrelated categories, arbitrarily slapping agencies with a crushing 15% tax deduction instead of the standard 6%.
The PAA’s proposed remedy is simple: introduce a comprehensive statutory definition that reflects the modern digital landscape.
A Win-Win for Revenue and Growth
Fixing these fiscal anomalies is not a concession; it is an economic necessity. By streamlining these rules, the government will reduce wasteful litigation, ease liquidity bottlenecks, and empower the advertising sector to drive the brand growth and consumer markets Pakistan desperately needs for sustainable recovery.
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