Economists are urging the public to look past the seemingly good tax data that shows that Sars collected R2.07 trillion in gross tax revenue in the 2022/2023 fiscal year and see the bigger picture of the danger of the tax base collapsing as the people who pay the biggest part start to emigrate to countries where there is less crime and where they pay less tax.
National Treasury and the South African Revenue Service (Sars) jointly published the 16th annual edition of the Tax Statistics on Friday that gives an overview of tax revenue collection and tax return information for the tax years 2019 to 2023, as well as for the 2018/2019 to 2022/2023 fiscal years.
According to the data, Sars collected R2.07 trillion in gross tax revenue (R183 billion or 9.7% more than the year before), refunded taxes worth R381 billion (R60 billion or 18.7% more than the year before) and netted tax revenue amounting to R1.69 trillion (R123 billion or 7.8% more than the preceding year).
ALSO READ: Taxpayers still mistrust Sars due to government corruption – Outa
However, Prof Bonke Dumisa, an independent economic analyst, says people must not just look at the data, but be aware of what it shows.
“Personal tax dominates tax collection. In preceding years, personal income tax accounted for 40% of tax revenue, but the latest data puts that figure at 35.7%, which shows that many people have lost their jobs.
“What it also shows is that it is no longer a rumour that high-income earners are emigrating. Although we have about 24 million tax payers, only about 8% of them actually pay personal income tax. This is less than 8 million people who make up 40% of the tax base in the country.”
The other tax payers all fell under the threshold of earning R91 000 per year, which will now this year increase to R95 000 per year.
Dumisa says where mostly white South Africans emigrated previously citing the crime in the country as the main reason, black South Africans are now also emigrating.
“These high-income earners say they only work for Sars because they pay so much tax and get very little back for what they pay. They emigrate and go to live in countries where there is a lower tax rate, better security and better schools and medical services.”
ALSO READ: Taxpayers spent nearly R450K for Cele’s assistant to attend Rugby World Cup final
He also does not see good news in the realm of corporate tax and points out that although the statistics for Company Income Tax (CIT) shows 1 057 040 companies were assessed by 30 September 2023 for the 2021 tax year, only 20.7% declared a positive taxable income, while 52.6% had taxable income equal to zero and the remaining 26.7% reported an assessed loss.
“This tells us that the company tax base is no longer delivering. It will not help to increase company tax as many companies are already not paying tax.”
Dumisa says South Africa’s tax base is diminishing on all fronts.
“We must look at the statistics and not see the glorious picture government is trying to paint as the data does not tell the full story.”
Jannie Rossouw, a visiting professor at the Wits Business School, agrees that the South African tax base is under pressure.
“Fewer people are paying more tax and this cannot continue. High-income earners will emigrate and there will be nobody left to pay tax.”
He also points out that although economic growth is weak, government wants increasingly more from tax payers.
According to the tax statistics published, there was a broad recovery in tax bases and higher-than-average commodity prices supported the growth in tax revenues although several risks affected tax revenue collections for the 2022/23 fiscal year, including the prolonged effects of global geo-political tensions, energy supply risks, constrained logistics networks, labour and social unrest, as well as weaker global and domestic economic growth and heightened inflation risks.
Compliance revenue from focused activities and efforts by Sars yielded R231.8 billion for the 2022/2023 fiscal year, R16 billion or 7.5% more than in the preceding year. The total value of trade facilitated by Sars for the 2022/2023 fiscal year was R3.9 trillion, R0.6 billion or 18.4% more than the previous year.
ALSO READ: R24,000 feast aboard Ramaphosa’s jet on taxpayers’ tab
Other key figures in the 2023 tax statistics are:
ALSO READ: South Africa is now going over fiscal cliff and we were warned – economist
The tax statistics also show that of the companies assessed, 432 large companies (0.2% of the companies with positive taxable income) had taxable income of more than R200 million and were liable for 67.1% of the company income tax assessed.
The Financial intermediation, insurance, real-estate and business services sector accounted for 253 241 (24.0%) of the assessed companies and was liable for 30.8% of the company income tax assessed, contributing the most among all the sectors.
Download our app and read this and other great stories on the move. Available for Android and iOS.