Title: Budget 2004 Revenue trends and tax proposals
1Budget 2004Revenue trends and tax proposals
2Content
- Tax Policy over the last 10 years
- 2004/05 tax relief proposals
- Direct tax
- Personal income tax rate bracket adjustments
- Income tax payable by individuals below age 65
- Income tax payable by individuals age 65 and over
- Transfer duty relief
- Incentivising share ownership by employees
3Content
- Direct tax policy reform agenda for 2004/05
- Royalty mining tax review
- Retirement fund tax reform
- Motor vehicle allowance review
- Indirect tax changes
- Excises on tobacco products
- Excises on alcoholic beverages
- General fuel levy
- Road Accident Fund levy
- Ad valorem customs excise duties
- VAT transfer duty
- Enhancement of tax administration
4Tax policy over the last 10 years
5Key elements of tax policy over the last 10 years
- Significant improvement in efficiency of tax
system and broadening of tax base - Ensured a more equitable tax system by allowing
significant relief, particularly for lower income
groups - Tax to GDP ratio has remained relatively stable
at 24,6 - Fiscal policy reform to broaden tax base
- Introduction of capital gains tax
- World wide taxation base
- Administrative reforms to improve efficiency
- Enhanced simplicity of the tax system has
resulted in increased compliance improved
taxpayer morality - Improved investor sentiments
6SAs tax/GDP ratio
- Since 1994 it has been Governments stated policy
to limit the taxation to GDP ratio to approx.
25. - 2003 MTBPS - Total Budget Revenue estimates
- 1999/00 24,2 of GDP
- 2000/01 24,1 of GDP
- 2001/02 23,6 of GDP
- 2002/03 24,6 of GDP
- 2003/04 24,6 of GDP
- 2004/05 24,6 of GDP
- 2005/06 24,7 of GDP
7SA tax mix as of GDP
8SA tax mix as of total tax revenue
9Tax base broadening
- Tax base broadening has allowed reduction of tax
rates - Reduction in corporate income tax rates
- Total PIT relief close to R63 billion
- Accelerated depreciation allowances
- Introduction of learnership deductions
- Reduction of taxes on property
- Reduction in consumption taxes
10Evolution of tax rates since 1980
11Tax relief announced since 1994/95
12Tax to GDP ratio
- Tax to GDP ratio has been on an upward path.
- Need to stabilize ratio to make taxes a flexible
policy tool - Long run expectations have to remain unaltered
- Deficit reduction over the years has ensured
flexibility in applying fiscal policy tools tax
relief increases in real expenditure (fixed
investment, health, skills). - Challenge is to ensure the same for tax policy.
13SAs tax/GDP ratio
- Since 1994 it has been Governments stated policy
to limit the taxation to GDP ratio to approx.
25. - 2004 BR - Total Budget Revenue estimates
- 1999/00 24,2 of GDP
- 2000/01 24,1 of GDP
- 2001/02 24,5 of GDP
- 2002/03 24,8 of GDP
- 2003/04 24,8 of GDP
- 2004/05 24,8 of GDP
- 2005/06 24,8 of GDP
- The current tax/GDP ratio indicates a gradual
increase from the 21,1 level in 1984.
14Tax revenue as a percentage of GDP 10 years
15Distribution of revenue
16Tax as of GDP
17Revenue trends and 2004/05 tax proposals
18Main budget revenue
19Summary of tax proposals
20Personal income tax rate and bracket adjustments
21Transfer duty
22Review of share schemes
- Current share schemes favour top management.
- Tax-free share grant to employees.
- Employer issuing shares to employees triggers
fringe benefit tax. - Proposed changes will allow a tax-free share
transfer to employees (capped amount). - Proposed restrictions to encourage long-term
ownership. - Amend current legislation relating to
equity-based incentives to prohibit executives
from converting ordinary salary into capital gain
for tax purposes.
23Tax treatment of hybrid instruments
- Debt and equity are treated differently for tax
purposes. - Taxpayers use hybrid instruments that can be
treated as either debt or equity to provide
optimal tax savings. - Proposed anti-avoidance measures are aimed at
treating these instruments according to their
substance and not their form. - These measures will encourage taxpayers to
classify debt and equity according to its true
form.
24Deferred payment schemes
- In the basic deferred payment scheme the selling
price is fixed but payment is over several years. - CGT is immediately triggered on all gains before
the seller has received all the payments. - In more complex situations, the selling price is
variable with payment over several years i.e. - a basic fixed sum including a percentage of
future profits, or - based on future profits alone
- The selling price is not readily determinable, no
gain can easily be calculated. - It is proposed to accommodate these issues.
25Tax exempt interest for CMA residents
- South African sourced interest paid to foreign
residents normally tax exempt. - This exemption does not apply to CMA residents.
- This provision became obsolete with introduction
of worldwide tax system. - It is proposed that South African sourced
interest paid to CMA residents be tax-free
subject to possible exchange of information rules.
26Government grants and exempt entities
- In 2003 Government grants for infrastructure
development on Government-owned property became
tax-exempt for certain PPPs. - This preferential treatment may be extended to
select group of public entities related capital
expenditure. - It has come to Governments attention that some
unresolved issues require consideration. These
are - Tax depreciation allowances on money expended by
the private party on infrastructure - Clarifying the VAT treatment of these transfers.
27Stamp duty
- Stamp duty on mortgage loans abolished to
encourage first-time home ownership. - Closing arbitrage opportunities between Stamp
Duties and Transfer Duty - Stamp duty on long-term leases vastly lower
amounts than transfer duty on actual transfer of
real property. - Hence, stamp duty increased for LT leases if
nature of transaction is similar to property
transfer. - Enhancing enforcement measures
- Penalty for late stamping of lease documents will
no longer be limited to R4000 - Late stamping for leasing documents will no
longer be allowed retrospectively - Alignment of penalties structure with other Acts.
282004/05 agenda for reviewing some key tax
instruments
29Mineral royalty bill
- Refinement of bill after extensive consultation
with stakeholders. - Refinement includes
- Delay of introduction of royalty by five years -
2009 - Removal of fiscal stabilisation clause to ensure
certainty regarding royalty rates - Marginal mines and potential double royalties
need to be addressed. - Issue of marginal mines potentially overstated
- Nature of marginality matters
- Procedures to accommodate communities for
potential loss of royalty income over time - Unequal distribution of mineral deposits and
fiscal devolution
30Impact of royalty stories versus substance
- Econometric model suggests that
- Royalty will have limited impact on employment
and output - Different royalty rates will have to apply to
various mining sectors due to different tax
incidences - Rate differentiation informed by diverse economic
and distributional impacts. - Revenue-based royalty remains
- Royalty is nothing but a marginal change in
commodity prices - Econometric work suggest that economic
consequences are limited - Time series analysis shows that severity of
revenue based tax versus profit tax is overstated
for most sectors
31Mining tax review
- Mineral Royalty Bill necessitates a holistic
reassessment of current fiscal regime for mining
sectors, including additional allowance
ring-fencing provision rate differentiation for
diverse mineral sectors gold mining tax formula
STC exemption, etc. - Gold mining tax formula provides for
- Income tax exemption and
- STC relief
- Relief for marginal mines more appropriate for a
royalty regime than the corporate profit tax. - Propose review of 40 per cent surcharge rate for
oil extracting companies. - Review aimed at attracting investment in oil and
gas industry.
32Pension fund reform
- Completion expected during 2004/05.
- Holistic approach requires modeling of all saving
and tax instruments. - International literature suggest limited impact
of tax policy on aggregate saving - Primary impact lies with saving portfolio
- Need to assess interaction between compulsory
saving and tax policy - In light of complex dynamics between different
savings instruments and entities, apparent
obvious solutions become questionable.
33Pension fund reform - its not that simple
- Do contractual savings increase aggregate
savings? - Can saving be enforced in the presence of
financial liberalization? - Do higher returns on savings increase savings?
- Income and substitution effects (international
evidence does not indicate that higher returns on
S do indeed increase S) - Are savings for retirement purposes really
statistically that low in SA? - Not so stats ignore returns by pension funds,
capital gains on property and overestimate impact
of durable consumption - Is the saver aware of the different returns on
his/her saving portfolio? - Need to improve information flow to promote
optimal choices (see Sunday Times of 22 February)
34Pension fund reform - its not that simple
- Does tax policy discriminate against pension
funds? - Propensity to save differs for different savings
instruments e.g. income earned from house price
appreciation could have higher propensity to save
than income from wages - To increase aggregate savings there may be need
for certain trade-offs in respect of tax
neutrality principle for different savings
instruments - International evidence suggests limited impact of
tax policy changes on savings dynamics - Further complications
- If returns have positive impact on level of
savings, then increasing returns on contractual
savings would improve households position. But no
transparency in respect of returns, high
commissions hence, is there income security
post retirement?
35Pension fund reform - its not that simple
- Poor households face budget constraints since
their contractual saving commitments cannot be
countered by borrowings hence, contractual
savings are very limiting. It is here that tax
policy changes may be needed against the revenue
neutrality requirement. - Tax policy must change dynamics of savings
instruments to provide poor households with more
choices to earn optimal returns with low risk
(e.g. retail bond) lowering RFT may be
inefficient way unless pension funds can prove
strong relationship between returns and
additional savings. - In case of higher income households contractual
savings are less limiting as they face fewer
limits on credit. However, they face risk as they
face interest rate risk on their borrowings to
counter long run savings commitments the
greater the degree of financial liberalisation,
the weaker policymakers ability to increase
saving rate
36Car allowance
- Use of deemed motor expense schedule has
escalated significantly - Concern over revenue losses
- Need to reconcile actual with deemed expenses
- Income versus consumption tax
- In an environment of limited room for tax relief,
trade-offs become inevitable - Intended changes not only aimed at revenue
collection but primarily at changing behaviour - Government intends to continue its support for
income tax relief
37Indirect Tax Proposal 2004
- Increases in general fuel levy and Road Accident
Fund fuel levy. - Increase excise duties on alcoholic beverages.
- Increase excise duties on tobacco products.
- Abolish ad valorem customs and excise duties on
certain cosmetic products, computer printers,
recorded music, clocks, and photographic film
rolls. - Increase diesel fuel concession / refund to
Agriculture, Forestry and Mining.
38Fuel taxes
- 10 c/litre increase in general fuel levy on
petrol and diesel to R1,11 and R0,95
respectively. - 5 c/litre increase in Road Accident Fund levy on
petrol and diesel to 26,5 c/litre. - Total fuel taxes as percentage of pump price
increase from 35 on petrol and diesel in 2003/04
to approximately 37,4 and 36,4 respectively for
2004/05.
39Diesel fuel tax concession / refund
- Increase in refund of general fuel levy on diesel
for primary producers (agriculture, forestry,
mining) from 31,6 to 38,8 (or from 26.86 c/l to
36.86 c/l). - Nominal increase of 15 c/litre in total diesel
refund for primary producers - General Fuel levy refund increased by 10 c/litre
- RAF levy refund increased by 5 c/litre
- Refunds for all other beneficiaries increased by
nominal increase in fuel taxes to maintain
current levels of benefit.
40Taxes as of fuel price 1999 40
2002/03 93 octane petrol 2002/03 diesel 2003/04 93 octane petrol 2003/04 diesel 2004/05 93 octane petrol 2004/05 Diesel
General fuel levy, RAF levy, CE levy, equalisa-tion fund levy, IP marker 28,8 27,0 35,0 35,0 37,4 36,4
41Excise duties on tobacco products
- Tax incidence (excise duties VAT as a of
retail selling prices) on tobacco products
increased from 50 to 52. - This increase translates into the following
excise duty increases for 2004/05 - Cigarettes 16.55 to R4,53 per 20
- Cigarette Tobacco 11.7 to R139,03 per kg
- Pipe Tobacco 17.3 to R68,31 per kg
- Cigars 15.67 to R1 233,04 per kg
42Excise duties on alcoholic beverages
- Proposed total tax incidence of 23, 33 and 43 per
cent for wine, beer and spirits respectively. - Tax burden benchmark will be phased in over three
years. - Excise duty increases for 2004/05
- Natural wine 30,7 to R0.88 per 750 ml
- Sparkling wine 28,0 to R2.43 per 750 ml
- Fortified Wine 16,0 to R1.75 per 750 ml
- Clear Beer 9,0 to R1.15 per 750 ml
- AFBs Ciders 7,1 to R1.15 per 750 ml
- Spirits 13,51 to R14.78 per 750 ml
- No increases in excise duties on sorghum beer /
Traditional African beer
43Ad valorem customs and excise duties
- Abolish ad valorem customs and excise duties on
the following products - Some cosmetic products preparations used for
hair, shampoos, deodorants, bath preparations,
etc. - Recorder and unrecorded music (CDs magnetic
tapes) - Computer printing machines and photo copying
machines - Clocks
- Photographic film rolls