The government is considering an incentive package for mobile phone manufacturing units to reduce mobile import bill, which is currently around $2 billion annually, it was learnt. The Ministry of Information Technology and Telecommunication (MoITT) has expressed inability to bring mobile phone manufacturing companies in the country unless the government announces incentive package for them, official sources revealed to Business Recorder.
The government has issued 18 licences to mobile assemblers and most of them are stationed in Azad Jammu and Kashmir due to tax holiday facility; however, there is not a single mobile manufacturing unit in the country that contributes to the import bill. According to Pakistan Bureau of Statistics (PBS), mobile phones import witnessed a decline of 7.60 percent in the first nine months (July-March) of 2018-19 as it remained $557.187 million compared to $603.046 million during the same period of the preceding year.
Mobile phone imports in March 2019, which stood at $79.049 million, registered 2.64 percent growth as compared to $77.013 million imports in March 2018. Last month's figure was 45.52 percent higher when compared to $54.320 million in February 2019. Overall telecom imports saw a decline of 8.86 percent during July-March (2018-19) when compared to the same period of the preceding year.
Total imports were recorded at $1,031.786 million during this period when compared to $1,132.038 million in July-March (2017-18), while registering 5.97 percent growth in March 2019. This figure stood at $127.768 million in March 2019 as compared to $120.565 million during February 2019. Other telecom apparatus imports witnessed a phenomenal decline of over 10.28 percent in July-March (2018-19) as they stood at $474.599 million against $528.992 million during the same period of the preceding year. When compared to February 2019, other telecom apparatus imports registered 26.46 percent negative growth in March as it was $48.719 million compared to $66.245 million in February 2019.
GSM Association (commonly referred to as 'GSMA' or Global System for Mobile Communications) in its latest report, titled "Reforming mobile sector taxation in Pakistan: Unlocking economic and social benefits through tax reform in the mobile sector," states that significant investment is required to expand the mobile market and improve the affordability of services for consumers. In particular, a focus on expanding network coverage, and investments in the quality of data services, can accelerate the growth of the sector in Pakistan.
The report states further improvements in affordability of mobile services and devices would contribute to mobile market expansion and development of digital economy in Pakistan. For the bottom 20 percent and 40 percent income groups of Pakistani population, the total cost of mobile ownership (for both low and medium consumption baskets) is above the "1 for 2" United Nations (UN) affordability target (1 GB of data costing less than 2 percent of the monthly income).
Moreover, an upfront cost of a handset represents an affordability challenge for those lower-income Pakistanis who do not have access to finance, which would enable them to pay the cost of a mobile phone in installments.