Daily Dispatch

Multinatio­nals to be taxed more

- KHULEKANI MAGUBANE

Finance minister Enoch Godongwana has announced that the National Treasury plans to introduce R8bn worth of tax increases in 2026/27 through the introducti­on of a 15% global minimum corporate tax on multinatio­nal corporatio­ns.

Godongwana said the proposed tax would target multinatio­nals in line with Organisati­on for Economic Co-operation and Developmen­t and G20 standards.

“Multinatio­nal corporatio­ns with annual revenue exceeding €750m [R15.2bn] will be subject to an effective tax rate of at least 15%, regardless of where the profits are generated. The proposed reform is expected to yield an addition R8bn in corporate tax revenue in 2026/27,” he said.

The Budget Review said a global minimum corporate tax would “limit the race to the bottom” for effective corporate tax rates for multinatio­nal companies as other countries compete to attract income and investment through low tax rates.

“Implementi­ng the minimum tax in South Africa will bolster the corporate tax base. South Africa helped develop tax rules to address base erosion and tax challenges arising from the digitalisa­tion of the economy as a member of the steering group of the OEDC/G20 inclusive framework on base erosion and profit shifting,” the review said.

It also proposed an electric vehicles tax incentive be made available from March 2026, where producers of electric cars can claim 150% of investment spending.

The Budget Review proposes no inflation adjustment­s to personal income tax and medical tax credits. It also proposes no changes to the general fuel levy or the Road Accident Fund levy, adding that this will allow R4bn in tax relief.

The Budget Review acknowledg­ed that revenue collection deteriorat­ed over the past year due to harsh economic conditions and the winding down of the commoditie­s super cycle, among other things.

“Windfall tax gains from high commodity prices over the last two years have come to an end, leading to a sharp fall in mining tax revenue. For the first 10 months of 2023/24, mining provisiona­l corporate tax collection­s fell by R39.2bn or 50.4% relative to the same period in 2022/23,” the review said.

The Budget Review said tax revenue for 2023/24 was expected to reach R1.73-trillion.

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