Sunday World (South Africa)

Hazy targets worrying

- STAFF REPORTER

THE South African Institute of Profession­al Accountant­s (SAIPA) has welcomed the focus on austerity in the 2016 budget tabled on Wednesday in Parliament by the Minister of Finance, Pravin Gordhan.

However Ettiene Retief, chairperso­n of the National Tax and SARS Stakeholde­rs Committees at SAIPA, says the budget is weakened by a lack of clear targets and timelines. No clear targets and timelines Certain parts of government are bloated and lacks specifics, and the Minister is surely right to make it the target for his strict measures. His repeated point that we cannot spend money we don t have, and that we cannot borrow what we can t repay, are welcome reality checks,” Retief says. But I confess to feeling that the medicine could have been a little stronger, and the absence of concrete savings targets and timelines is a real missed opportunit­y.”

This lack of detail may be of particular concern to internatio­nal investors and ratings agencies, he speculates. Similarly, while it was good to hear that SAA and SA Express might be consolidat­ed, a firmer expression of intent with regards government funding would have been preferable.

Retief noted that the minister chose not to raise the extra revenues needed through a VAT increase as many commentato­rs expected. On balance, he felt that this was probably a sound political decision given the restless labour environmen­t and the wave of student and service delivery protests currently under way. However, a VAT increase may still happen in the near future.

The budget outlined several important growth initiative­s, including continued spending on infrastruc­ture, but was again short on detail as regards targets and deadlines. With the growth projection revised downwards to a barely visible 0,9%, a more concrete set of targets could have made a more convincing growth story for foreign investors and the battlewear­y local business community.

Retief says that the reallocati­on of R475-million to the Department of Small Business Developmen­t was one of the major positives of the budget, along with a recommitme­nt to making it easier to do business generally. The Minister s proposal to identify unspent government funds and reallocate them was also a wise move.

On the tax front, the Minister achieved a good balance by providing marginal tax relief for the lowerincom­e earners while avoiding a direct increase for the rich. In fact, the rich will effectivel­y pay more because there is no relief for inflation, and the increase in capital gains tax and the aggressive attack on the use of trusts for estate planning will naturally affect them the most.

In the same vein, the proposed extension of the existing Voluntary Disclosure Programme to include foreign assets, for a six-month period starting October of this year, will give wealthy taxpayers with undisclose­d foreign assets the opportunit­y to come clean, but will not offend compliant taxpayers.

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