President directs FBR to undo unjust taxation on lecturers’ salaries

ISLAMABAD - President Dr Arif Alvi on Monday rejected 30 identical representations filed by the Federal Board of Revenue (FBR) against the Federal Tax Ombudsman’s decision directing the FBR to stop charging excessive tax deductions from wages of the hired lecturers at the withholding stage.

While upholding the FTO’s decision, the president observed that the withholding income tax at the rate of 20% over the monthly salary of Rs 36,000 of lecturers, provisionally hired on semester-to-semester basis, was unlawful and an act of maladministration on the part of FBR.

He directed the FBR to ensure that hired lecturers of Post Graduate College for Women, Bannu or other such educational institutions were not burdened with excessive tax deductions at the withholding stage.

He further directed the Regional Tax Officer Peshawar to reprocess the instant cases under relevant legal provisions and issue necessary clarifications and instructions to all withholding agents to implement his (president’s) decision and report compliance within 45 days.

President Alvi rejected the FBR’s arguments that the payments made to hired lecturers fell under the definition of “Services”, which attracted withholding tax at the rate of 20%.

He observed that under Section 12 read with sections 149 and 153(1)(b) of the Income Tax Ordinance, 2001, the wages received by hired employees under any of the forms of employment i.e., regular, ad-hoc, temporary, daily wages, contingency etc. would be treated as “Salary” and would liable to taxation as “Salary Income”.

He said the hired lecturers were under Master-Servant Relationship with hiring institutions as in the cases of regular, ad-hoc, temporary, hired, daily wages, contingency staff. Moreover, the law saw their wages at par with salary pay and, therefore, their wages could not be excluded from the ambit of salary taxation.

The president in his decision held that in view of the circumstances and facts of the cases, the FTO’s orders were based on valid justifications and sound legal footings, therefore, the FBR’s representations were liable to be rejected.

 

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