Times of Eswatini

SARS targeting ‘lowest hanging fruit’

-

PRETORIA – The South African Revenue Service (SARS) is focused on collecting the ‘lowest hanging fruit’ to help close South Africa’s tax gap, including increased compliance and broadening the taxpayer base, said Commission­er Edward Kieswetter.

“Our position as SARS is that the lowest hanging fruit is still collecting the taxes that are due, closing the tax gap and broadening the base,” he said, addressing the national tax indaba on Monday (September 20).

Kieswetter said the revenue collector’s focus on ‘easy wins’ does not mean that there is no scope for new policy initiative­s, however.

“These can never be taken off the table.

“There is still too much inequity in the world and too many practices that favour large corporates and the wealthy,” he said.

Policies

Kieswetter said some of the policies which had previously been mooted include:

• The introducti­on of taxation of the digitalisa­tion of the economy;

• The global discussion around a minimum corporate tax;

• The ongoing discussion about placing wealth taxes back on the table. “While some of you may say that these are knee-jerk reactions, they are reactions to the reality of the levels of abuse of the tax system that still exists. So these (policies) can never be taken off the table.

“But in South Africa, we believe that there is still so much that can be harvested from the taxes that are due, and the rebuilding of SARS is essential.”

Tax experts at the indaba said the country’s tax gap is sitting at R200 billion or four per cent of the GDP, the SABC reported.

Payable

The tax gap is the difference between the taxes that should be payable and tax collected.

“In today’s numbers you are looking at R40 billion-plus on VAT side and frightenin­gly they estimated that corporate tax gap from corporate is around two per cent of the GDP,” said Kyle Mandy, tax policy leader at profession­al services firm PwC.

“So, we talking about R100 billion in corporate tax, and from personal income tax, there was a study done by Stellenbos­ch to around about R46 to 50 billion. If you look at the three we are already getting to R200 billion in terms of the tax gap.”

Kieswetter said that early signs show that there has been increased compliance as part of initiative­s to reduce the tax gap, and that this will ultimately remove the temptation by the government to look at other ways to raise revenue.

He added that increased focus on taxing electronic services, government suppliers and South Africans with funds overseas have also assisted in closing the country’s tax gap.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Eswatini