South Africa collects trillions in taxes South Africa collected R1.25 trillion (US$85 billion) in tax revenue in the financial year ended March 2021, around 12% less than the government's original target of R1.425 trillion, the revenue service said.
The economy, in recession even before the coronavirus struck, shrank by 7% in 2020, while unemployment also soared, leading to a record budget deficit as the government was starved of revenue while forced to spend more to fight the virus.
The initial 2020/21 target of R1.425 trillion was set by the National Treasury before the coronavirus pandemic struck in March last year.
Treasury revised the estimate down to R1.112 trillion in October, but then upped it to 1.212 trillion in the February 2021 budget.
The South African Revenue Service (Sars) said improved economic activity, higher collections company tax, especially mining firms, and greater tax compliance, had led to better collection than the February target.
Sars Commissioner Edward Kieswatter said the agency would focus on stricter compliance, especially by high net-worth individuals, to close the gap.
"Sars is aware of increasing number of south Africans who have financial assets offshore they have more than R400 billion in offshore accounts. We've identified around 10% of that, but we believe there's still a lot to be explained," Kieswatter told a news conference.
Kieswatter said the bans on the sale of alcohol and tobacco during the strictest period of the coronavirus lockdown cost the country around R14 billion in lost excise taxes. - Nampa/Reuters
The economy, in recession even before the coronavirus struck, shrank by 7% in 2020, while unemployment also soared, leading to a record budget deficit as the government was starved of revenue while forced to spend more to fight the virus.
The initial 2020/21 target of R1.425 trillion was set by the National Treasury before the coronavirus pandemic struck in March last year.
Treasury revised the estimate down to R1.112 trillion in October, but then upped it to 1.212 trillion in the February 2021 budget.
The South African Revenue Service (Sars) said improved economic activity, higher collections company tax, especially mining firms, and greater tax compliance, had led to better collection than the February target.
Sars Commissioner Edward Kieswatter said the agency would focus on stricter compliance, especially by high net-worth individuals, to close the gap.
"Sars is aware of increasing number of south Africans who have financial assets offshore they have more than R400 billion in offshore accounts. We've identified around 10% of that, but we believe there's still a lot to be explained," Kieswatter told a news conference.
Kieswatter said the bans on the sale of alcohol and tobacco during the strictest period of the coronavirus lockdown cost the country around R14 billion in lost excise taxes. - Nampa/Reuters