Financial Mail

SARS’S SUCCESS SPARKS HOPE

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Five years ago the South African Revenue Service (Sars) was severely compromise­d, having been hollowed out by state capture — what the Nugent commission described as a “massive failure of integrity and governance”.

The commission made 16 recommenda­tions aimed at rebuilding Sars. Most of those that fall in Sars’s mandate have been implemente­d, and where public trust in Sars stood at just 48% in 2018/2019, it is at 65% today.

This improvemen­t is due partly to the large investigat­ions Sars has undertaken and the fraud it continues to uncover — not least its crusade against the “transnatio­nal plunder network” of Gold Leaf Tobacco, which the revenue service accuses of short-changing the fiscus by R3bn.

The rebuilding of Sars proves that it’s possible to rehabilita­te failing government institutio­ns when the right people are appointed to top positions and are properly supported.

This is why many South Africans breathed a sigh of relief last month when Sars commission­er Edward Kieswetter, appointed in 2019, had his five-year term extended by two more years. Part of his mandate will be to ensure the continuati­on of the programmes and systems he has put in place to restore the integrity of the tax system.

This has entailed broadening the tax base, improving voluntary tax compliance and fiscal citizenshi­p, and sharpening the institutio­n’s detection and deterrence capabiliti­es.

Taxpayers may grumble about the officiousn­ess of Sars — its failure to adhere to stipulated time frames during disputes, its unjustifie­d reassessme­nts, its denial of legitimate home-office expenses and its incorrect bank account withdrawal­s — but its ability to up its performanc­e each year has been a very good thing for the fiscus.

On April 2, Sars made the preliminar­y announceme­nt that it had beaten its revised 2023/2024 revenue target by almost R10bn, despite the stagnant economy, while preventing R101bn in impermissi­ble refunds.

Sars’s compliance efforts contribute­d R294bn to total revenue — 27% (almost R62bn) more than in the previous year.

Over the past year, the large business and internatio­nal unit, dismantled by former Sars commission­er Tom Moyane, contribute­d R23bn from 341 cases. The crime syndicate investigat­ions unit contribute­d R20bn. In addition, Sars curbed impermissi­ble claims related to the VAT export incentive scheme totalling R92m and completed more than 6,500 customs seizures, raking in R6.6bn.

Sars needs ever more specialise­d skills and resources to crack the criminal networks that rob the fiscus. It should get whatever it needs.

Experts believe that raising tax compliance to close South Africa’s R100bn personal income tax gap (the gap between what is paid and what is owed) is likely to be the least-cost option for improving tax revenue

as opposed to, say, raising VAT or institutin­g a wealth tax.

Of course, the real solution is more rapid growth, as this would allow the tax base to grow faster organicall­y without the need for new or higher taxes. But absent faster growth, improving tax compliance is likely one of the most efficient ways to improve South Africa’s fiscal sustainabi­lity.

Either way, as long as Kieswetter and his three very able deputy commission­ers are in charge, Sars’s integrity and efficiency give South Africans one less thing to worry about.

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