See the full media release Media Release for more information.
Or visit the Trade Statistics webpage.
See the full media release Media Release for more information.
Or visit the Trade Statistics webpage.
The SARS Commissioner has made the commitment to restore the integrity of SARS and public trust in the institution. In accordance with this and following a disciplinary hearing chaired by a Senior Counsel from the Johannesburg Bar, Ms Refiloe Mokoena, the Chief Officer: Legal Counsel, has been found to have committed serious acts of misconduct. SARS has accepted the chairperson’s recommendation of immediate dismissal and her services have been terminated with effect from today, 15 November 2019.
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1. I am aware that the SARS application to court concerning a subpoena issued by the Public Protector compelling me to divulge taxpayer information has created a lot of speculation in the media and social media. Healthy debate is the basis for good democracy and the quality of the debate increases when it is informed by facts.
2. The SARS application to court is not about a specific taxpayer but SARS has turned to the court to clarify and determine an important legal principle that underscores a democratic principle founded on the relationship of trust between SARS and all taxpayers. This is a taxpayer’s right to privacy, which concerns the right to confidentiality of all information – personal and financial – held by the tax administration. Every single taxpayer in South Africa therefore has a direct vested interest in this matter on which we are seeking clarity, and no one can afford to be indifferent in this regard.
3. You could quite rightly ask why any organisation, or individual for that matter, would not welcome the obtaining of such clarity in a matter that clearly has such keen public interest and profound impact.
4. The constitutional principle of public access to information held by the state must be balanced against other constitutional principles, such as that of privacy, and other factors, such as the overriding risk of harm to a legitimate public or private interest. The interest of a taxpayer’s right to privacy, which concerns the right to confidentiality of personal information held by the tax administration, is generally recognized as outweighing the right to information and thus justifies confidentiality rules protecting privacy. Thus section 35 of the Promotion of Access to Information Act, 2000, provides mandatory protection for certain SARS records from third party requests.
5. Disclosure of tax information has consequences for the core business of any tax administration – the implementation and enforcement of tax legislation and regulation. The collection of taxes is clearly vital for any state financed by taxes and a tax administration’s primary responsibility is to collect the proper amount due to the government at the least possible cost to the public. The willingness of taxpayers to comply with the law depends greatly on the trust invested by citizens and businesses in the tax administration in question and in their confidence that their personal information will not be generally disclosed. Taxpayers should have their expectations confirmed that the tax authority administering the tax laws does so consistently and fairly so that similarly situated taxpayers are treated equally and consistently under the law. In the balancing of public interests, which may often be competing, the legislators clearly intended that taxpayer confidentiality is an overriding interest, unless otherwise expressed in law.
6. The Commissioner of SARS and all tax officials are legally compelled to uphold the confidentiality of taxpayers’ information, except under specific legal circumstances. The specific legal circumstances do not apply to the Public Protector.
7. The confidentiality provisions
7.1 In terms of the Tax Administration Act, 2011, (TAA) “taxpayer information” is subject to the confidentiality provisions which contained in Chapter 6 (sections 67 to 74) of the TAA.
7.2 The general rule is that all SARS officials must preserve the secrecy of “taxpayer information”. Section 69(1) of the TAA provides:
A person who is a current or former SARS official must preserve the secrecy of taxpayer information and may not disclose taxpayer information to a person who is not a SARS official.
7.3 There are, however specific provisions that allow “taxpayer information” to be disclosed to a person who is not a SARS official. These circumstances can be categorised into five categories:
7.4 The following Acts contain provisions that expressly override the tax confidentiality provisions:
The Public Protector Act, 1994, does not contain a provision that overrides the TAA’s confidentiality provisions.
7.5 Section 70 lists certain entities that SARS may provide information to but subsection 70(5) provides that such disclosure may be made only to the extent that it is necessary, relevant and proportionate to exercise a legislative function or duty. Further disclosure of taxpayer information by entities to whom SARS discloses under the provision is strictly regulated.
The Public Protector is not a person listed in section 70 of the TAA.
7.6 Even in the case of the parties permitted by law, SARS has to apply its mind to the purpose for which the information is being requested, how it will be used and how it will be protected.
7.7 The essence of this summary of the TAA is that the TAA does not allow SARS to provide “taxpayer information” to the Public Protector.
7.8 The breach of the TAA’s confidentiality provisions amounts to criminal offence in terms of section 236 of the TAA.
7.9 Equally a person who, without just cause refuses or fails to comply with a request for information by the Public Protector is guilty of a criminal offence under section 11(3) of the Public Protector Act, 1994.
8. In an attempt to avoid litigation, in 2018/19 officials from SARS and the Public Protector’s office briefed counsel jointly. The advice provided to SARS and the Public Protector, to my mind, clearly confirms that SARS cannot be compelled to provide taxpayer information to the Public Protector. Earlier this year I unequivocally expressed my support for the office of the Public Protector. In many other instances, I and my staff have worked diligently to extract information at the request of her office, and I shall continue to do so. I also expressed my wish that we would keep a line of communication open, where we could rather discuss issues of potential disagreement openly, honestly and frankly.
9. The subpoena issued upon me has taken me by surprise, as I believed that the goodwill expressed would be reciprocated in the interest of good governance and the constitutional duty between organs of state to cooperate with each other, to support each other and to respect each other’s functions and legal duties.
10. Taking this matter for judicial determination is certainly not my first choice. It would have been preferable for SARS and the Public Protector to have resolved this issue without resorting to a court. However, there is a fundamental issue of confidentiality of tax information at stake, which I am compelled to uphold for the benefit of all taxpayers. The principles are not limited to the taxpayers cited in the court documents. The principles affect every taxpayer and the efficient functioning of SARS. If at any stage either of the taxpayers consent to the release of their information, then SARS will respect that consent. Equally, if a court orders that SARS is required to release taxpayer information then I shall comply promptly with the order.
11. I view clarity on this matter as singularly important for democracy in South Africa and as a further building block in fulfilling my commitment to rebuild public trust and confidence in SARS. It is in this spirit that SARS’ application to court was made.
12. We are pleased with the outcome of the court decision today which essentially confirmed that parties will jointly engage with the court on the substantial matter whilst each retains their legal rights.
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Pretoria, 13 November 2019 – Tax season for individual taxpayers who want to file at a branch closed on the 31 October 2019. SARS wishes to thank taxpayers for their submissions thus far and is encouraged by the 3 882 111 personal income tax returns filed on a digital platform as well as at a branch. These returns include submissions for both current and previous years.
Filing a tax return on any of the digital platforms, namely, SARS MobiApp and eFiling platforms for non-provisional taxpayers will close on 04 December. This gives the taxpayers who file electronically an extra three weeks to file. Provisional taxpayers have until 31 January on eFiling.
With digital filing still available, SARS is expecting an estimated 1 744 535 as of 8 November 2019 of the outstanding returns to still be submitted through these channels. SARS wants to remind taxpayers who are yet to file, that Tax season for 2019 has been designed to make filing a return simple and easy.
Taxpayers are urged to use the opportunity and support available before 04 December, with the contact centre operating between 08:00 and18:00 on 25 – 29 November, and between 08:00 and 13:00 on Saturday, 30 November.
Should the extended electronic filing period not be used, administrative penalties will be levied for every month the return is outstanding. The non-filing of returns is a criminal offence.
Taxpayers with outstanding returns can download the SARS MobiApp from the Playstore or Appstore and easily perform the following actions:
1. Register for SARS eFiling,
2. Submit a return,
3. Use the phone camera to upload supporting documents,
4. Retrieve their username or reset their password and
5. View their Notice of Assessment (ITA34), among other services.
6. Request a call-back to get the assistance of a SARS tax agent.
SARS has also given eFiling a major refresh to make navigation much easier and allow for flexibility to file from any location.
Taxpayers who meet all of the following criteria need not submit a return:
1. Their total employment income for the year before tax is not more than R500 000
2. They only receive employment income from ONE EMPLOYER for the full tax year
3. They have no other form of INCOME (e.g. car allowance, business income, and rental income, taxable interest or income from another job)
4. They don’t have any additional allowable tax related deductions to claim (e.g. medical expenses, retirement annuity contributions and travel expenses).
Should taxpayers visit a branch with a personal income tax return filing query, they will be assisted with self-filing via the MobiApp or eFiling platforms. Taxpayers with smartphones will be required to download the SARS MobiApp before they can commence filing.
PRETORIA, Thursday 31 October 2019 – The owner of a Durban-based metal recycling company pleaded guilty last week to several charges relating to the exportation of mixed copper and brass scrap.
Angelo Solimene, owner of Group Wreck, pleaded guilty on four counts relating to Section 54(1)(a) of the International Trade Administration Act, 71 of 2002, and Section 84 of the Customs and Excise Act 91 of 1964.
He was sentenced to a fine of R500 000, half of which was suspended for five years on condition the accused does not export any goods without the relevant permits. He has also paid R600 000 in order to obtain release of his goods from Customs. The current goods are, however, not allowed to be exported.
This follows an inspection by Customs in July this year of two containers, belonging to Group Wreck, which were being exported from the Durban harbour. The contents of the containers were declared as unrefined copper. However, upon inspection, they were found to contain mixed copper and brass scrap. The case was referred to the International Trade Administration Commission of SA (ITAC).
Since February 2012, the Minister of Economic Development prescribed that copper scrap shall not be exported from the Republic of South Africa without a permit, and ITAC has not issued any permits since 2017.
Earlier this year, SARS and the Department of Trade and Industry established an Inter-Agency working group to address illicit trade activities within the Clothing, Textile and Footwear Industry, the scrap metal Industry and the gold metal Industry. The working group was formed to ensure that key Government departments work collectively to address the smuggling, under-valuation and fraud perpetrated across these specific industries.
In light of these engagements and collaboration, various joint operational interventions are currently taking place targeting these industries. As a result, the detection of mis-declaration and under-declaration of weights has been identified in the scrap metal industry.
In August this year, two directors of the Port Elizabeth-based company, Beacon Valley (Pty) Ltd, also pleaded guilty to 36 charges relating to the export of scrap metal. They declared the contents of 36 containers at Coega port as “sheet piling” and not as “scrap metal” and failed to follow the correct export regulations.
The accused also paid a fine of R500 000, half of which was suspended for five years on condition the accused do not export any goods without the relevant permits. They paid R400 000 to obtain release of their goods, which cannot be exported without obtaining the required permits.
The scrap metal industry is a multi-billion rand industry and contributes an estimated R15 billion annually to South Africa’s gross domestic product. In 2017, a scrap metal company lost a case in the Constitutional Court to challenge the State’s scrap metal export provisions, known as the price preference system, as well as ITAC’s decision to refuse to issue export permits to the company, in accordance with the price preference system. This followed almost four years of litigation over the lawfulness of the price preference system.
In terms of copper scrap, large volumes of copper and copper alloys have been exported from South Africa at high prices due to huge demand from certain countries. This was having a negative effect on the local copper industry and the drive to obtain copper was fuelling the theft of copper cable, causing billions of rands in damages. The mass exportation of scrap copper was also negatively impacting the local industry, which was leading to lower production volumes and unemployment – hence the recent tightening of regulations relating to the export of copper from South Africa.
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Pretoria, 31 October 2019 – The South African Revenue Service (SARS) today releases trade statistics for September 2019 recording a trade surplus of R5.16 billion. These statistics include trade data with Botswana, Eswatini, Lesotho and Namibia (BELN). The year-to-date (01 January to 30 September 2019) trade surplus R2.51 billion is an improvement from the R1.76 billion surplus for the comparable period in 2018. Exports decreased by 2.2% year-on-year whilst imports for the same period showed a decrease of 9.8%.
JOHANNESBURG, 23 October 2019 – SARS Commissioner Edward Kieswetter launched the re-established Large Business Centre at its new premises in Woodmead today. Speaking to chief executives of top companies, Mr Kieswetter presented the value proposition that the re-established Centre will offer to bring about voluntary compliance amongst corporate South Africa.
The SARS Vision 2024, introduced by Mr Kieswetter, is to build a smart modern SARS with unquestionable integrity, which is trusted and admired by all stakeholders, as well as its international peers.
Currently corporate income tax is the third largest revenue contributor, having brought in 16.6% of the total revenue in the 2018/2019 financial year.
Mr Kieswetter identified that the strategic objectives that will drive the Large Business Centre will be a focus on voluntary compliance, effective and efficient revenue collection, and enhancing service and SARS’ relationship with large business. In addition, the Large Business Centre is to become a centre of excellence that responds effectively to challenges and requirements presented by this complex taxpayer segment and which is aligned to international tax administration best practice.
The value proposition offered by the large business centre is to promote voluntary compliance at the lowest cost to the taxpayer and SARS, with a three-pronged approach consisting of –
• Dedicated relationship management by industry and sector, ensuring that tax teams allocated to the client has specialised knowledge and understanding of the client’s business.
• A highly skilled and professional team with proficiency on multiple tax types for taxpayers with complex tax portfolios, including those operating in multiple tax jurisdictions. To this end, SARS aims to facilitate clarity of the taxpayer’s obligations and improve efficiency in assessments, audits and dispute resolution processes.
• Centralised management of the taxpayer’s tax compliance requirements across tax types which SARS’ refers to as a ‘One-stop shop’ end-to-end service. This service provides the taxpayer with seamless interaction with SARS for any tax requirement or query the taxpayer may have, through one relationship management team who manages their entire tax portfolio.
The taxpayer segment that the Centre focuses on is large businesses defined as groups or entities with a turnover greater than R1 billion; are listed on the Johannesburg Stock Exchange; financial services with a turnover greater than R500 million; mining companies with turnover greater than R500 million, all entities or groups of companies with a combined total assets value greater than R100 million, as well as multinational companies. The other client segment is Ultra High Net-Worth Individuals whose total assets are in excess of R75 Million. Taxpayers who meet one of these criteria are registered with the SARS Large Business Centre.
The Large Business Centre is situated at the Woodmead North Office Park, 54 Maxwell Drive, Johannesburg.
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Pretoria, 22 October 2019 – Employers are reminded that they have two weeks before the Employer Interim Reconciliation tax period closes on 31 October 2019. The reconciliation period opened on 23 September 2019.
As with other stakeholders and taxpayers, employers are called to join hands with SARS in building the fiscus for South Africa’s development agenda. For the 2017/2018 fiscal year, PAYE constituted 96.4% of the total Personal Income Tax collected (Reference: SARS’ 2018 Tax Statistics publication, Chapter 1, Table A1.4.2).
The interim reconciliation period for employers covers the six-months’ transaction period from 1 March to 31 August while the final annual reconciliation is for the full tax year from 1 March to the last day of February, and must be submitted during April and May. This totals two reconciliation declarations that employers are required to make during the year of assessment to ensure that employee IRP5/IT3(a) certificates are accurately issued on time for the personal income tax filing season.
During the reconciliation periods, the employer must confirm or correct the amounts they declared in the first six months of the tax year for Pay-As-You-Earn, the Skills Development Levy, their Unemployment Insurance Contributions and the Employment Tax Incentive (ETI), as well as payments made and tax values reflected on their employees’ IRP5 /ITR(a) tax certificates. The elements that must reconcile are the monthly declarations, payments made – excluding penalty and interest payments – and the values for Pay-As-You-Earn, Skills Development Levy, and the Unemployment Insurance Contributions reflected on the IRP5/IT3(a) certificates.
Amongst the changes for this year’s interim employers’ reconciliation period, is that the Employment Tax Incentive has been extended by ten years to 2029. The Employment Tax Incentive (ETI) is an incentive that aims to encourage employers to hire young job seekers. It reduces the cost of hiring young people by reducing the amount of Pay As You Earn (PAYE) owed to SARS without affecting the employees’ wages.Employers qualifying for the Incentive need to submit the EMP501 reconciliation before the end of October to claim any monthly Incentive amounts that have not been used during the first six months (March to August).
Employers who do not submit and claim for the first six months (March to August) will forfeit any Employment Tax Incentive credit due to them.
Employers who wait to submit during the Annual Reconciliation period will only be able to claim the credit amount for the second six-month period (September to February), but not for the first six month periods.
Enhancements
The Employer Interim Reconciliation period sees the following enhancements:
Filing channels
SARS e@syFile™ Employer is a tailor-made platform designed to help taxpayers who are employers or payroll administrators, to manage their tax affairs. Employers can file via eFiling or e@syFile™. With eFiling, up to 50 IRP5/IT3(a) certificates can be submitted while with e@syFile™ the number is limitless. Branch filing is limited to five certificates only.
Registering employees for income tax
SARS has developed bulk registration solutions on e@syFile™ for employers to register their employees for income tax and automatically obtaining income tax numbers for these employees. This therefore does not require the employee to visit a SARS branch to obtain an income tax number.
The Commissioner of SARS has committed to the important work of building internal and public confidence in SARS. Accordingly, following interactions and information exchanged between SARS and Mr Teboho Mokoena, hitherto the Chief Officer – Human Capital and Development, it has been concluded that:
(a) SARS and Mr Teboho Mokoena should, and have agreed to, end the employment relationship with immediate effect.
(b) SARS will not proceed with further actions against Mr Teboho Mokoena in pursuance of allegations against him.
SARS wishes him well in his future endeavours.
PRETORIA, TUESDAY 1 OCTOBER 2019 – The South African Revenue Service will celebrate its 22nd anniversary in October 2019.
On this anniversary, we want to once again emphasize our commitment to provide a taxpayer experience that is characterized by the highest level of professionalism and ethics throughout the country and abroad.
The appointment of Commissioner Edward Kieswetter ushered in a new beginning for SARS. Since his arrival in May 2019, he has been single-mindedly focused on addressing the internal confidence and morale of employees, as well as restoring the trust and confidence that the public has in us.
Along with this is the process of addressing the organizational deficiencies and skills shortages within SARS, which is integral to the much needed rebuilding of the organization.
This work will require relentless effort over the next few years to ensure that SARS transforms into a smart modern revenue and customs administration, with unquestionable integrity that is trusted and admired.
We are blessed with thousands of honest men and women, who bring their positive contribution to this rebuilding process.
SARS will also continue to invest in its already advanced and efficient systems, to continually enhance the experience of taxpayers, as it administers its mandate to collect taxes, facilitate trade and manage imports and exports across our borders.
The anniversary celebrations will take place against a backdrop of the current tax season that has seen an increase in the number of compliant taxpayers.
We would like to thank taxpayers for their willingness to comply, as well as their patience with us in areas where we at times do not live up to the level of service standards we set for ourselves.
We will work tirelessly to address these inefficiencies as part of rebuilding and the modernization of SARS.
The current economic climate, along with our internal challenges, makes the work of revenue collection so much harder.
The low economic growth, growing unemployment due to retrenchments, and suppressed levels of consumption, inevitably result in lower profits, and consequently declining tax revenues.
But we remain optimistic that efforts by our government to stimulate the economy, as well as the work to rebuild tax morality and compliance, will yield positive results.
With this in mind, Mr Kieswetter is determined that SARS remains resolute, focused and single-minded about pursuing its revenue collection mandate for South Africa.
In fact, SARS fully appreciates the responsibility entrusted to it by the constitution, and is aware of the implications that lower revenue collections have on the efforts of government to deliver on its mandate.
We remain mindful that we serve a higher purpose that enables government with the financial resources to provide goods and services towards a well-functioning democracy. Our work has a human face, and benefits especially the most vulnerable in society, to improve the quality of their life, as well as to ensure the wellbeing of all South Africans.
The 2019 national celebrations pay tribute to the efforts that have been put by government, parliament, along with SARS’ leadership and employees to establish a revenue collection that will be respected amongst its peers as one of the best in the world.
The 22 years celebrations also pay tribute to the role played by all patriots and former employees, in establishing and strengthening SARS to be one of the strongest and efficient state owned institutions in the country.
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