
Budget brings very little cheer for the average consumer
Financial experts from Momentum weigh in on how the Budget may impact consumers and taxpayers.
Financial experts from Momentum weigh in on how the Budget may impact consumers and taxpayers.
Here are the government’s proposals for PIT, the medical tax credits, the fuel levies, and the duties on alcohol and tobacco.
Moonstone Business School of Excellence’s engaging and interactive National Credit Act courses are tailored for industry professionals.
A proposed reform will see half the account’s R500bn distributed to a SARB contingency reserve (R100bn) and to Treasury (R150bn).
SARS will apply a top-up tax on profits reported by qualifying South African multinationals operating in other countries with effective tax rates below 15%.
Many fund members are likely to withdraw the seed capital from their savings component.
The Minister of Finance says the R1.4 billion allocation demonstrates the government’s commitment to National Health Insurance.
Changes are afoot to the qualifying criteria for the Social Relief of Distress grant, for which provisional expenditure has been allocated to 2027.
The loss equated to more than 20% of the company’s annual profit, based on the exchange rate at the time of the incident.
The substantial tax increases would have to be implemented in an already tough economic environment, says a report by FTI Consulting.
Old Mutual weighs in on how the Budget is likely to affect the country’s credit rating, economic growth, and the capital markets.
National Treasury continues to toe the line between fiscal continuity, consolidation, and declining revenues amid an increasingly stagnant local economy.
Whether the objectives as set out in the Budget are achievable will be determined by the government’s political will to anchor expenditure and put resources to better use.
Implementing – not merely creating – a Risk Management and Compliance Programme is crucial to ensure compliance with the Act.
South Africa received a positive risk rating upgrade recently, but according to Allianz Trade’s Country Risk Atlas, the country still faces increased commercial risk due to temporary disruptions in demand.
As South Africans await the 2024 Budget Speech, a SAIPA tax specialist weighs in on the potential extension of the tax incentives for renewable energy.
If Hollard’s ‘contradictory’ interpretation were correct, it could never be held liable to make payment, says judge.
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