IMF approves exempting consumers using up to 200 units from late surcharge

The International Monetary Fund (IMF) has approved provision of relief to the electricity consumers, as Pakistan saw countrywide protests over inflated bills thanks to the persistent tariff hikes.

The news was shared by the finance ministry which said on Thursday that Caretaker Prime Minister Anwaarul Haq Kakar would get the cabinet approval of the plan through summary circulation.

However, the relief, which is temporary in its nature, would be limited to the consumers using up to 200 units of electricity as the households falling in the category of 201 to 400 units are omitted by the world’s top lender.

Read more: Increasing energy prices, interest rates, tax collection remains IMF’s focus

According to the finance ministry’s documents, those consuming up to 200 units are exempted from late surcharge [fine] if haven’t paid the monthly bills for August on time while they are also allowed to pay the amount in instalments.

Meanwhile, the move is going to benefit around four million consumers, while the numbers would have jumped to 32 million in case those consuming up to 400 units of electricity had remained part of the relief plan.

On Wednesday, top government officials had announced a countrywide crackdown against smugglers and power thieves in attempt to reduce the losses suffered by national exchequer and control the rising prices of different commodities.

Read more: Govt goes for countrywide crackdown against smuggling, power theft

In this connection, Muhammad Ali and Murtaza Solangi – two members of the caretaker cabinet – announced the planned crackdown against electricity theft as the huge line losses, rising cost of imported fuel for power generation and the capacity charges have inflated the monthly bills to a record level.

While revealing that the annual loss due to electricity theft and failure to pay bills currently stands at Rs589 billion, Ali said power theft meant that others were forced to pay higher bills and admitted that the power tariff couldn’t be reduced unless the practice was stopped.

Spread the love

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Next Post

Babar, Shadab nominated for ICC Player of the Month award

Thu Sep 7 , 2023
ISLAMABAD -UNS:The International Cricket Council (ICC) has nominated two Pakistan stars and an explosive West Indies wicket-keeper for the Men’s Player of the Month Award for August 2023. Two-time ICC Men’s Player of the Month Babar Azam will look to bag the coveted prize for the third time after being […]

You May Like

Chief Editor

Iftikhar Mashwani

Quick Links