Early Times Newspaper Jammu
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‘Poor’ Pak Govt imposes ‘Gobar Tax’ to overcome fiscal crisis
Netizens ridicule directive, make mockery of ruling elite
Early Times Report

Jammu, Apr 7: Pakistan’s Punjab province is at the centre of a social media firestorm after the provincial government introduced a daily livestock waste levy — swiftly dubbed the “Gobar Tax” by a mockery-hungry internet — of 30 Pakistani rupees per cow or buffalo.
The tax, announced under Chief Minister Maryam Nawaz, has unleashed a torrent of memes, satirical reels, and jokes targeting the country’s government, military establishment, and ruling elite. Netizens on both sides of the India-Pakistan border have had a field day, with one particularly viral suggestion urging citizens to fit diapers on their buffaloes as a tax-avoidance strategy.
The levy is being rolled out in a pilot phase covering 168 cattle colonies, beginning with Lahore neighbourhoods such as Harbanspura and Gujjarpura. Revenue collected is intended to fund the daily removal and processing of animal waste, with longer-term plans to convert dung into biogas for cooking and electricity generation, while also yielding organic fertiliser as a sustainable input for farmers.
Officially, the programme has been framed as an environmental and energy initiative. Unofficially, it has become a lightning rod for public frustration over Pakistan’s deepening fiscal crisis.
The Gobar Tax arrives amid a broader wave of economic pain. Fuel prices have climbed sharply, with diesel now at 520 rupees per litre and petrol at 458.40 rupees — increases tied in part to the ongoing conflict in the Middle East, which has disrupted regional trade routes and driven up import costs. Currency volatility and a swelling import bill have further strained public finances, as Islamabad continues to walk a tightrope between domestic reform and mounting external obligations.
Chief among those obligations is an active IMF programme, under which Pakistan has repeatedly committed to revenue-raising and subsidy-cutting measures in exchange for crucial bailout tranches. But a new and rather more impatient creditor has now entered the picture.
The UAE — long a source of financial support for cash-strapped Islamabad — has reportedly asked Pakistan to begin repaying its loans without further delay. The demand has caught Pakistani authorities at a particularly awkward moment, as the government simultaneously juggles IMF negotiations, rising energy costs, and the economic ripple effects of a volatile West Asian neighbourhood. Adding a Gulf creditor’s insistence on repayment to that already precarious balancing act has done little to calm nerves in Islamabad.
Pakistan, for its part, has not lacked for activity. The government has been engaged on multiple economic fronts at once — reassuring international lenders, managing currency pressures, and attempting to sustain reform momentum while shielding a battered population from further cost-of-living shocks. Whether taxing livestock waste will meaningfully ease that burden remains, at best, an open question.
For now, the country’s buffaloes — unbothered and magnificently unaware of their new fiscal significance — continue to go about their business. The internet, naturally, has thoughts.