Praise all round as SARS proves naysayers wrong

LazyLion

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Cape Town - Naysayers who predicted that recent scandals at the South African Revenue Service would negatively impact revenue collection had to eat their words on Wednesday when SARS announced it exceeded its collection target by R7.3bn.

This not only drew the praise of Finance Minister Nhlanhla Nene but also of SA's largest body of tax practitioners, the SA Institute of Tax Professionals (SAIT), and one of the country's leading tax experts.

SAIT chief executive Stiaan Klue praised "Commissioner Tom Moyane and the 15 000 SARS officials for acting diligently in executing their mandate and surpassing all expectations".

He also thanked all tax practitioners in SA who assisted taxpayers to comply with fiscal laws and submit their returns.
Turning to the difficult economic environment, Nene said Moyane established a comprehensive revenue plan to coordinate all activities linked to overall revenue management. The revenue plan included the establishment of national and regional coordinating committees, and provided strategic guidance to SARS.

Nene pointed towards improved compliance to the tune of R22bn as one of the reasons why revenue collection had continued to remain robust in trying economic times.

Taxman in good working order

Tax guru Professor Matthew Lester told BizNews there is no denying that SARS has been going through a difficult patch, but the taxman is in good working order.

"There was the appointment of (Oupa) Magushula to Commissioner after Pravin Gordhan’s promotion to minister of finance in 2009. That didn’t work. And then SARS sat with an acting commissioner for more than a year thereafter. But SARS has held together. I think that says something about the other 15 000 SARS employees. Well done!"

On Wednesday, Nene announced that SARS collected R986.4bn for the 2014/15 financial year.

While lower commodity prices, sluggish economic growth, labour disputes and electricity supply troubles represented challenges to revenue collection, SARS had outperformed expectations, the finance minister told journalists in Pretoria.

Of the R986.4bn, R353.8bn came from personal income tax (PIT), which came in at 0.9% above the revised estimate in the 2015 budget of R350.7bn. PIT collected over the last financial year was 13.8% or R42.9bn higher than that collected in the previous financial year.

Corporate income tax was 4.1% higher than in 2013/14, coming in at R186.9bn. This was R2.3bn or 1.2% higher than the revised 2015 budget estimate.

Total collections of value added tax (VAT) came in at R261.1bn, 0.2% higher than expected in the revised 2015 budget estimate, with R23.4bn more collected in VAT this year than in the previous financial year, representing a 9.9% improvement.

Government had revised its tax collection target from R993.6bn, announced in the 2014 budget and based on 2.9% gross domestic product (GDP) growth, to R979bn with GDP growth revised to 1.4% in the February 2015 budget. Moyane, appointed in September last year by President Jacob Zuma, said revenue collection is a function of how the economy is functioning and performing.
"The outstanding returns and revenue numbers you [Nene] have just announced are just a testimony that South African taxpayers have spoken.

"We needed to ensure everyone across SARS was mobilised to meet our revenue challenges. In the last three months, we've had torrid but exciting and uplifting moments which have allowed me a window into SARS."

He expressed his appreciation to every single South African taxpayer who contributed towards revenue collection, since without them SARS would not have achieved its target.

Asked how exactly the increased revenue collection would impact the fiscus going forward, Nene said it was too early too judge.

"The numbers indeed will have a positive impact on our fiscal framework but we wouldn't want to [say] what that impact is right now. These are preliminary numbers. By June we will be in a position to work out what the impact of this performance is going to be on our forecasts and projections," he said.


Fin24
Source: http://www.fin24.com/Economy/Praise-all-round-as-SARS-proves-naysayers-wrong-20150402
 
No they are not. They are extortionists. From personal experience they collect money,not owed to them, from people using bully tactics.

They told us the same with Eishkom and the Post Office, the water and sanitation department, roads and infrastructure.
We know you are lying through your teeth.
 
Heard on the radio they've held back refunds to plump up their coffers so they look good.
 
Heard on the radio they've held back refunds to plump up their coffers so they look good.
Could be some truth in this. They owe a mate of mine a couple of bar in vat refunds ... stalling ... stalling ... stalling ...
 
They use repeated audits to make people fed up and bully them into just paying.
 
They use repeated audits to make people fed up and bully them into just paying.

I raise you one.
They make up tax you owe them ( PAYE )from a time you weren't employed more than 20 years ago, and demand that you sign a admission of guilt.

And when you ask for them to give you the employer name and more information, they tell you its not their problem its yours and that they have none of that information.

They are the Biggest Crook in the country's right hand man just as sick and corrupt as him.

And these "claims" and debt are sold to debt collectors with less information than SARS. And before you can log a complaint, and before you can do anything you have to sign the acceptance of guilt.

Fantastic ANC story.
 
Listening to Cape Talk last night, Money Talk boy was querying that a lot of people are battling to get refunds out of SARS...... A lot more red tape in the way....

I can relate to this, As I import from the Grand Ol' Republic and had to eventually write off in excess of 100 000 bucks in VAT refunds due to various problems that SARS had with my claims....... This was over a 24 month period...

I currently have in the region of R40 000 in submitted claims outstanding...... and that is only for the last 4 months....

I am only one exporter....wonder how much is still due to other folk? (combined)
 
****ing ****s made me pay in R30k extra last year. The fight to prove I didn't owe them something was insane.
 
676x380
 
Friend of mine also have a problem with SARS and VAT in the region of R30k
 
I finally won a 8(!) year tax-dispute with SARS (http://www.naschenweng.info/2014/11/24/sars-fidentia-paye-fraud/) and found the people dealing with my issues unprofessional, arrogant and ignorant. The SARS employee dealing with the issue and our accountant, purposefully wiped out my bank account before the xmas holidays. Eventually won over the behemoth of SARS to fight their incompetence of wanting to extract R1,5m in allegedly unpaid PAYE from me. Very frustrating exercise, as we had all the paperwork and proof that everything was in good standing.

SARS has never apologised over any mistakes they make (such as when they decided to allocate a new income-tax-number to me and then send garnishing orders to my employer - this took 14 months to sort out) and it is up to the tax-payer to hire professionals at the own expense to defend. So 8 years later, over 150K spent in accounting and legal fees, been broke during most of December due to SARS stuff-up (and having to deal with unpaid bills afterwards) has left a bitter aftertaste behind.

The one lesson I learned from all of this: Keep all your paperwork in order (salary slips, tax statements) and backed up and record/stamp all correspondence. FWIW - SARS still has not provided tax-clearance nor given a complete break-down of the tax-refund for the 8 years. I don't consider this "professional" and just outright petty.
 
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