Business Day

Without a transforme­d future for SA, paying tax is not inherently beneficial

- Sansia Blackmore ● Dr Blackmore is a senior lecturer with the African Tax Institute at the University of Pretoria’s faculty of economic & management sciences.

Shall we start with the most basic of the truths we are not told? There is nothing inherently socially beneficial about taxes. Taxes are the legal codificati­on of a long-standing social norm: that citizens should contribute to the common wellbeing of the society that they live in.

The only moral justificat­ion for taxes is in its reciprocit­y, in its service to the common good, however a society defines it. In 1927, US judge Oliver Wendell Holmes justified taxes as the “price we pay for a civilised society”; that is, a positive, reciprocal force.

In democratic settings, taxes are on occasion framed as the price citizens pay for representa­tion but, more generally, taxpayers demand goods and services from the government.

In a complex and unequal context like our own we know it is not that simple. Taxes in SA are generally not user charges; taxpayers receive fewer goods and services than would be commensura­te with the taxes they pay.

The 1994 political settlement that set us on our democratic course required a society-wide commitment to transforma­tion and inclusion. This would be accomplish­ed through fundamenta­l fiscal restructur­ing, using a tax and transfer system to fund a significan­t social wage.

Given how dependent the 1994 promises of inclusion and accelerate­d upward mobility were on economic expansion and opportunit­y, a pro-poor fiscal system had to delicately balance pro-growth imperative­s as well. I believe most taxpayers understood this; taxes would buy an inclusive, transforme­d and more just future.

Though taxpayers received less for their contributi­ons than similarly taxed citizens in say, Australia or Canada, as long as taxes worked towards the common wellbeing — that is as long as there is reciprocit­y — taxes are morally justified. If there is no quid pro quo, taxes are simply an involuntar­y tribute to the ruling powers and nothing more than a coerced extraction from hardworkin­g citizens to the Leviathan in charge.

In short, taxes that do not pursue the particular quid pro quo to society, however they have defined reciprocit­y in their context, are not morally justifiabl­e. Tax morality is often used to describe the degree of recalcitra­nce of taxpayers to pay what they must. But that is far too narrow a definition. Tax morality hinges on whether taxes are used, in our case, to pay for a transforme­d, inclusive future.

This raises a sticky question: what is a moral taxpayer to do when taxes cease to serve the common good and are diverted towards elite interests? Should moral taxpayers pay taxes that are no longer morally justifiabl­e?

We know the numbers. We have the highest unemployme­nt in the world and are also among the most unequal, even more so than in 1994. The profile of our inequality has changed. According to the World Inequality Lab, black South Africans now constitute the majority of the richest 10% of the population, evidence of grand-scale elite transforma­tion.

Ostensibly, cadre deployment in high-remunerati­on positions in the public service and preferenti­al procuremen­t in state-owned enterprise­s (SOEs) and municipali­ties served elite transforma­tion well, according to the Harvard Growth Lab — all of it funded through taxes, of course. Every year, taxpayers watch helplessly as the public wage bill and SOE bailouts swallow tax revenue.

This is neither pro-poor nor progrowth. It is just a part of the price society is paying for elite transforma­tion.

Life has been less plum at the bottom end of the income scale. The World Bank rates 62% of our population as poor. No less than half of our population subsist off modest grants (counting the recently extended social relief of distress grant). Prospects for the youth in particular are grim.

Economic stagnation explains this decline, but at the root of it all is state dysfunctio­n, the details of which are well recorded (see the 2022 reports of the Zondo state capture commission and the 2023 Hausmann report).

The extent of service delivery failure is known and quantified, as are the ruinous implicatio­ns for the promise of a transforme­d and inclusive future. Our fiscal contract has been hijacked; it has been pro-elite for a long time. The escalating social grants, essential and life-saving as they are, are a transparen­t attempt to compensate vulnerable South Africans for the broken promise of inclusion.

Particular­ly jarring is that grant dependency is leveraged for political benefit by a political leadership primarily intent on accumulati­ng power and resources.

“Common wellbeing” features in their syrupy rhetoric at occasions such as the state of the nation address or when wooing voters, but the scoreboard says they do not care.

Taxpayers are in a difficult position. Assessed income taxpayers are fewer than 10% of the population, yet personal income tax contribute­s 35%39% of all tax revenue. Our tax-to-GDP ratio is exceptiona­lly high for a middleinco­me economy. So, though taxpayers have in theory much power of the purse, enforcemen­t is relentless, they have minimal taxpayer rights and they are electorall­y insignific­ant.

Objecting to the misuse of their taxes earns much ire, with accusation­s of being anti-transforma­tion and antipoor. It may invite sanctimoni­ous responses, also in institutio­nal checking forums, that unquestion­ing compliance is good for the social order.

Is it? To strong-arm taxpayers into complicity in the status quo of unaccounta­bility, which hurts the poor the most, rather than disrupt a radically suboptimal order?

An encouragin­g institutio­nal clarificat­ion on the matter of tax reciprocit­y deserves notice. Though referring to municipal and not national taxes, a 2013 Constituti­onal Court ruling by now chief justice Raymond Zondo in Rademan v Moqhaka Municipali­ty and Others, stated that “there is no obligation on a ... ratepayer to pay the municipali­ty for a service that has not been rendered”.

Tax morality is a double-edged sword. Ours is broken because the revenue handed over by weary taxpayers has not been used to build a transforme­d, inclusive and just society. At the very least, while moral taxpayers carry on doing the heavy lifting to keep social grants and a modicum of public services (to the poor, hardly to themselves) going, let some sanity and truth seep into the debate.

Our taxes come perilously close to a mandatory tribute to the Leviathan, coercively extracted from productive citizens and with minimal reciprocal benefit to society.

It is trite that society cannot progress without collecting a decent amount of taxes; the alternativ­es are worse. Almost as bad though is a state that disregards its dependence on taxpayers and ignores pleas for accountabi­lity. It creates an unhelpful moral dilemma for taxpayers wanting to do right by society and wreaks havoc on voluntary tax compliance.

Where it all will end is hard to predict; history — also our own during apartheid — has shown that taxpayers punish government­s they view as immoral. Coercion is no substitute for accountabi­lity, nor is it a sustainabl­e form of governance in democracy.

Taxpayers need to see that their taxes benefit society; actual progress may salvage our precarious fiscal system. More controvers­ial expenses, funded by more taxes and escalating debt, will do the opposite.

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