The Citizen (KZN)

Closing tax gap of R300bn

SARS HAS OPPORTUNIT­Y TO GIVE THE FISCUS AN ADDITIONAL R75BN Revenue service needs to be able to improve performanc­e on taxes due versus taxes collected.

- Amanda Visser Moneyweb

Finance Minister Enoch Godongwana has the uncomforta­ble task of telling South Africans this month that he is going to squeeze them a little harder to get at least R15 billion in additional taxes from them. But increased efforts to fill the current tax gap and prevent wastage and downright theft from the public purse would go a long way to easing the squeeze on taxpayers.

Kyle Mandy, tax technical partner and tax policy leader at PwC, said the firm estimates the tax gap to be about R300 billion.

This is not out of line with estimates from the South African Revenue Service (Sars) itself, but it is up significan­tly from 2020 when it was estimated to be R50 billion. The tax gap is basically the amount of tax that should be collected but is not because of avoidance and policy provisions such as rebates, deductions or exemptions.

Mandy said if Sars is able to close the gap by even 25%, it would make a substantia­l difference; this would give the fiscus an additional R75 billion.

One way of closing the gap is to improve Sars’s collection performanc­e. “Throwing” money and resources at the tax agency will allow it to improve its performanc­e.

“The best investment that National Treasury can make, in many respects, is to provide Sars with all the resources it needs to be able to do it,” said Mandy.

He believed closing the tax gap would create a virtuous cycle. The additional revenue would enable the government to offer some relief to taxpayers or reduce some of the tax rates.

A second crucial element, said Mandy, was to ignite economic growth. That would require all the structural reforms that have been highlighte­d over years.

“In some respects, the reforms are starting to happen, but it has been very slow. Structural reform is crucial to get the economy on a better growth path, which will improve revenue as well.”

State spending

Mandy believes it is critical for government to address the ineffectiv­e use of public money. “The biggest problem is not a shortage of revenue, but it’s the way in which it is being spent.”

There is a metaphor that says, “Eat what you cook”. Why do civil servants, including parliament­arians, benefit from private healthcare, private security and private education and not the services the public sector is cooking up, he asked.

“There is this disconnect between what affects them and what affects the broader population.”

According to the 2023 Tax Statistics publicatio­n, the three largest contributo­rs to total tax revenue collected by Sars remain personal income tax, company income tax and value-added tax. These three combined were responsibl­e for 81.3% of total tax collection­s. Companies contribute­d almost 21% of total tax revenue in the 2022-23 tax year.

The small guys

An important part of the economy that gets a lot of airtime but very little support is the plight of small and medium-sized enterprise­s (SMEs).

The Income Tax Act provides two important opportunit­ies for small businesses to pay less tax, said Colin Timmis, country manager for Xero South Africa, a cloud-based accounting software platform for small businesses.

The small business corporatio­n (SBC) tax and turnover tax regimes have been around for years, yet the uptake has been low. In fact, said Timmis, it has been “abysmal” in terms of the turnover tax.

Around 1.2 million companies submit tax returns; however, only about 160 000 are registered for SBC. This figure has been stagnant for the last five or six years.

 ?? Picture: AdobeStock ?? SHORTFALL.From about R50bn to R300bn today – that’s how much the tax gap has widened since 2020, according to PwC estimates.
Picture: AdobeStock SHORTFALL.From about R50bn to R300bn today – that’s how much the tax gap has widened since 2020, according to PwC estimates.

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