Sowetan

Taxing times for Mzansi ‘sinners’

Drinkers, smokers hit with major hikes

- By Andisiwe Makinana

South Africans will pay even more for alcohol and tobacco following yet another increase in sin taxes announced by finance minister Tito Mboweni yesterday.

Bubbly lovers may think twice before popping that champagne, as excise duty on sparkling wine is set to go up by 6%, from R13.55 to R14.36 a litre. Excise duty on a 340ml can of beer goes up by 4.4%, from R1.74 to R1.81.

The same goes for cider and other alcoholic fruit drinks. The duty on a 750ml bottle of spirits such as vodka, gin and whisky will jump from R65.84 to R68.73.

An option would perhaps be sticking with traditiona­l African beer, which will not be affected by the increases.

The excise duty on an unfortifie­d litre bottle of wine will go up by 19c, from R4.20 to R4.39 and from R7.03 to R7.34 for a litre of fortified wine.

Mboweni announced that the duty on a pack of 20 cigarettes will go up by 74c from R16.66 to R17.40, while duty on a typical 23g cigar will go up by 7.5% to R96.45.

To adjust for inflation, the government proposes to increase the general fuel levy by 16c a litre and the Road Accident Fund levy by 9c a litre from April 1.

Treasury documents show that taxes on alcohol and tobacco are determined within a policy framework that targets the excise duty burden.

“The excise burdens for most types of alcoholic beverages and tobacco products currently exceed the targeted level as a result of above-inflation increases and price fluctuatio­ns,” reads the 2020 Budget Review. “Government will increase most excise duties by an amount that matches expected inflation of 4.4% for 2020/21, and by 6% in the case of sparkling [wine] and 7.5% for pipe tobacco and cigars.”

While it may be tough times for “sinners”, social grant recipients have something to smile about as the grants that provide relief to millions of poor households are set to increase in April. Mboweni announced that old age, disability, war veterans and care dependency grants will increase by R80 to R1,860 a month. The foster care grant will go up by R40 to R1,040, while the child support grant will increase by R20 in April from R425 to R445. Over the next three years, the total number of social grant beneficiar­ies is expected to increase by almost a million to about 19 million by 2022/23, according to the Budget Review.

 ?? /MOELETSI MABE ?? Alcohol guzzlers will feel the pinch when they visit their drinking holes after today’s budget speech.
/MOELETSI MABE Alcohol guzzlers will feel the pinch when they visit their drinking holes after today’s budget speech.

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