Money and Periods: Pakistan’s Tax Change and What It Means
Key Vocabulary
Listening
Money and Periods: Pakistan’s Tax Change and What It Means
Pakistan has removed an 18% sales tax on sanitary pads and other menstrual products in the 2026–27 federal budget. The finance minister presented the budget in June 2026. The change sets the sales tax for these items to zero.
Only about 12% of women and girls in Pakistan use commercially made menstrual products. Many people still use cloth or other reusable materials. Campaigners welcomed the tax removal but warned it may not make pads cheap enough for the poorest families, because import duties and other charges can keep prices high. The budget also removes the sales tax on some contraceptives. Campaigners and lawyers had challenged the tax and pushed for change.
Quiz
Reading Practice
Read the article from the Listening section aloud. Your AI teacher will give you pronunciation feedback.
Discussion
Do you think price changes for everyday items affect your shopping choices? How?
Have you ever had to choose a cheaper product because of cost? What happened?
What do you think when you hear that many people use reusable cloth instead of branded pads?