The Citizen (Gauteng)

14% price hike of some brown breads

- Moneyweb

Ingé Lamprecht

A proposed technical amendment to the VAT Act could see consumers pay 14% more for certain categories of brown wheat bread, including whole-wheat brown bread, high-fibre brown bread, high-protein brown bread and brown health bread from early 2018.

Currently, consumers buy these food items at a price inclusive of 0% of VAT (zero-rated), instead of the standard 14% applicable to most goods and services.

PwC Africa’s Charles de Wet explains that when VAT was introduced in 1991, brown bread was considered a “merit good” and qualified to be zero-rated. The bread regulation­s effectivel­y meant that all categories of brown bread were zero-rated items for VAT purposes.

A Practice Note previously issued by the SA Revenue Service (Sars) implied that whole-wheat brown bread, high-fibre brown bread, high-protein brown bread and brown health bread were considered brown bread and qualified as zero-rated items, but the note was subsequent­ly withdrawn. An updated version of the bread regulation­s, published earlier in 2017, effectivel­y amended the definition of brown bread and includes various subclasses of brown bread under the class ‘brown wheat bread’.

“These subclasses represent bread that is baked using brown wheat flour and classifies ‘brown wheat bread’ differentl­y from ‘brown bread’,” De Wet says.

The most recent Taxation Laws Amendment Bill proposed a technical correction to the VAT Act to define brown bread in terms of the updated bread regulation­s, but didn’t replace the term ‘brown bread’ with ‘brown wheat bread’.

“The result is that certain categories of brown wheat bread, namely whole-wheat brown bread, high-fibre brown bread, high-protein brown bread and brown health bread, which qualified to be zero-rated under Schedule 2 will become standard rated (14%) on implementa­tion of the Taxation Laws Amendment Bill, 2017,” De Wet says.

Moneyweb

Nova debenture holders may experience some déjà vu when looking at the Section 155 Scheme of Arrangemen­t documentat­ion on the proposed Nova group listing.

Just as when Sharemax collapsed, investors must decide on the future of their investment­s based on a legal and technical document, by the same author: current Nova chairperso­n and major shareholde­r Connie Myburgh.

It explains how debenture holders can swap their debentures for shares in a new JSE-listed entity, allowing them to sell these shares on the open market to liquidate at least a portion of their original Sharemax investment. Again, investors are threatened with losing more money if they don’t approve the proposal.

Certain categories of brown wheat bread will soon be taxed at 14%.

Charles de Wet PwC Africa

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