In a major step toward digitizing Pakistan’s tax infrastructure, Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif was briefed this week on the Federal Board of Revenue’s (FBR) upcoming initiative to digitally monitor freight movement across the country. The high-level meeting, held in Islamabad and chaired by the Prime Minister, focused on the rollout of a digital tracking system aimed at curbing sales tax evasion and tackling widespread smuggling of goods.
According to the official briefing, FBR Chairman Rashid Mahmood Langrial outlined the operational details of the system, which will involve outfitting freight vehicles with e-tags and digital monitoring devices. These tools will be deployed initially on major national highways as part of a phased implementation plan. The first phase of the program will launch in a single city as a pilot, with a national rollout to follow based on performance and infrastructure readiness.
The core purpose of the digital freight tracking system is to bring greater transparency and automation to the movement of goods within the country. Officials stated that the system will be linked to both local and international trade databases. By using artificial intelligence, the digital network will help detect tax evasion patterns and irregularities at an early stage, improving FBR’s enforcement capabilities.
In addition to highway freight tracking, the FBR is also preparing to roll out an automated monitoring system at key import and export checkpoints, including seaports and airports. The integration of these checkpoints with AI-enabled surveillance will ensure round-the-clock monitoring of cargo, minimizing the scope for underreporting, misdeclaration, or illegal bypassing of customs regulations.
The meeting also reviewed the FBR’s existing efforts in the digitization of production and sales monitoring for key industries. Officials noted that similar real-time monitoring systems have already been deployed in the sugar industry and are being extended to sectors like tobacco, beverages, steel, cement, hatcheries, and poultry feed. These digital interventions are intended to close long-standing loopholes in sales tax collection and improve compliance among industrial producers.
Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif emphasized that while genuine taxpayers and businesses will continue to receive policy support and facilitation, tax evaders will face stringent legal consequences. He directed FBR and relevant institutions to fast-track the adoption of technological solutions and implement comprehensive tax reform measures without delay.
The urgency for reforms comes against the backdrop of missed revenue targets by the FBR. For the first ten months of the current fiscal year (July–April FY25), the board has fallen short of its collection goal by nearly Rs831 billion. It managed to collect Rs9.3 trillion against a budgetary target of Rs10.13 trillion, a shortfall attributed primarily to reduced imports and weaker-than-expected inflation—both of which had a direct impact on sales tax revenues.
FBR’s push toward digitization, automation, and AI-backed monitoring is seen as a critical pivot in modernizing Pakistan’s tax regime. It also aligns with broader national goals of economic formalization and digital governance under the “Digital Pakistan” vision. As the system scales up, the government expects not only an increase in tax compliance but also a more efficient and transparent logistics ecosystem.
By leveraging technology to combat entrenched issues like smuggling and revenue leakage, the initiative signals a progressive shift in how the state engages with its economic stakeholders and enforces accountability in trade and taxation.