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Authorised Financial Services Provider – FSP No: 859 2009 Pre-Budget Presentation: “It’s Just a Jump to the Left” Presented by: Dawie Roodt 4 February 2009 “It’s Just a Jump to the Left” 1. How your Tax Money is being spent? 2. Can the State afford the ANC Manifesto’s bill? Basic Economic System Production = 100 Consumption = 100 Economic Growth Year 1: Production = 100 Investment = 20 Consumption = 80 Year 2: Eco. Growth = 5.0% Production = 105 Investment +2 +3 = 22 Consumption = 83 Economic Growth Things Certain in Life: Death & TAXES Year 1: Production -5 = 100 Investment = Taxes 15 = 30 Consumption - 25 = 55 Scenario 1: All Taxes are Invested Production = 100 + 30 Investment =15 = 45 Taxes = 30 Consumption = 55 Year 2: Eco. Growth = 10.0% Production = 110 +3 Investment =18 Taxes = 30 Consumption +7 = 62 Economic Growth Scenario 1 Scenario 2: All Taxes go to Expenditure Production = 100 + 10 Investment =15 = 25 Taxes + 30 + 20 = 30 Consumption = 55 = 75 Year 2: Eco. Growth = 7.0% Production +2 = 107 Investment Taxes =17 = 30 Consumption +5 = 60 Economic Growth Scenario 1 Scenario 2 Scenario 3: Efficiency Loss Production = 100 +7 =15 = 22 Taxes = 30 Investment + 25 30 Consumption + 18 = 55 = 73 Year 2: Eco. Growth = 6.0% Production +2 = 106.0 Investment = 17 . Taxes +4 = 30 Consumption = 59 Economic Growth Scenario 1 Scenario 2 Scenario 3 Year 2: Eco. Growth = 6.0% Investment= 17 Production •=Consumption > Production 106.0 Taxes = 30 • CA Deficit • Currency Volatility Consumption = 59 • Pressure on Prices, i.e. Inflation Want • Upward Pressure on Interest Rates !!! =106 80 as before !! =127 Adverse Impacts… 2008 2009 -7.5% -5.1% 11.6% 4.5% 15.0% 11.5% R9.52 R9.00 -0.3% (Q3) 0.1% 3.0% 0.5% CA Balance:GDP Consumption > Production Inflation (CPI, average) Interest Rate (Prime, end of yr) Rand (end of yr) HH savings Economic Growth (full year) Undermining the Economy EXTERNALLY INTERNALLY The State Takes from Savers – Gives to Spenders In Reality….. Source: SARB, Efficient Research 2008 But in Reality… 2007 GDP GDP Growth (real) R2 000bn 5.1% Total State Revenue R537bn Total Company Income Tax R137bn Total Investment R422bn What if Company Tax Scrapped? 2007 GDP R 2020 2000bn bn GDP Growth (real) 5.1% + 0.9% 5.1% = 6.0% Total State Revenue (excl CIT) 6 yrs Total Company Income Tax Total Investment R537bn – R137bn R537bn = R400bn R0bn R422bn + 0.63*R137bn = R422bn + R87.5bn = R509.5bn Therefore, Needed 1. Higher Savings: – Lower Corporate Taxes – Lower Personal Income Taxes 2. Less Social Expenditure: – 12m+ Grants Recipients – Education Results ?? 3. Focus on State Efficiency 4. More Focus on Capital Expenditure/ Productive Capacity Treasury’s Playground: 2008/09 Comparing Apples with Apples… 2008/09 (Budget) SA Reserve Bank National Treasury National Government Finance Main Budget Revenue 625,4 Revenue 625,4 Expenditure 611,1 0.6% of Expenditure 611,1 Balance 14,3 GDP Balance 14,3 + Social Security + Social Security Revenue 24,7 Expenditure 20,5 = Consolidated Central Government = Consolidated National Budget 18,5 0.8% of Balance GDP + provincial + local government = Consolidated General Government + public enterprises = Non-financial public sector? Three Spheres for Revenue • Provincial Provincial (1.0%) Local government (municipal) (3.6%) National (95.6%) – – – – Motor vehicle licenses Casino (gambling) taxes Liquor licenses Fuel levy? • Local – Property rates – RSC levies (prior to 06/07) • National – PIT, CIT, VAT, Fuel levy Source: 2008 Tax Statistics, National Treasury and SARS Revenue Revenue Revenue Categories Strong Demand Economic Activity, Commodity Cycle Wage Increases, Inflation… 12.0% National Tax Revenues Revenue Sources (Est. 2008/09) 28% 25% 3% 4% 31% 9% Individual Tax Companies (incl STC) VAT Excise Duties Fuel Levy Other Registered Income Tax Payers Registered Taxpayers Individuals Companies Trusts PAYE 2004/05 4.1m 930k 320k 300k 2005/06 4.5m 1.1m 345k 330k 2006/07 45% Total PIT 75% Total CIT 4.8mpaid by 1.2m 375k companies 350k top paid 5.0%by 1.2% 2007/08 5.2m (9.3% y/y) 1.6m (30.0% y/y) 385k (2.8% y/y) 380k (8.8% y/y) Source: National Treasury & SARS, 2008, business Day 3 Feb 08 2008/09 in Review: Revenue Budget ’08 MTBPS ’08 Efficient Estimate Diff. (%) Income Tax 369.7 380.7 383.8 14.0 (3.8%) Individual 191.1 201.0 196.8 5.8 (3.0%) Company 156.5 158.9 163.8 7.3 (4.7%) STC 20.0 18.2 19.7 -0.3 (-1.5%) Other 2.2 2.6 2.2 -0.1 (0.0%) VAT 167.0 167.0 154.2 -12.9 (-7.7%) Fuel Levy 26.4 25.5 25.0 -1.4 (-5.3%) C&E&Other 91.2 80.4 81.7 -9.5 (-10.4%) SACU -28.9 -27.1 -27.5 -1.4 (-4.8%) Total 625.4 626.5 617.2 -8.1 (-1.3%) Reasons for Under Shooting • Individual tax High wage and salary negotiations (wage inflation) • Company tax Commodity prices (“Two halves” of 2008 – commodity boom/bust) • STC Retained income • VAT Consumption expenditure plummets Total Budget Revenue Tax revenue • 98.0% Non-tax revenue • 2.0%* • Interest • Dividends Less: SACU payments Total budget revenue • Botswana, Lesotho, Namibia, Swaziland (BLNS) • Rent on land • Similar excise and customs (import) duties • Sales of good and services •Revenues pooled and distributed based on formula • Fines and penalties Source: 2008 Tax Statistics, National Treasury and SARS SA Contributions to and received from SACU Pool Rbn 50 40 30 20 10 0 -10 -20 -30 Contribution to and received from SACU pool 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 Contribution to (include some BLNS collections) 2005 2006 2007 Receive from Loss 2008 Source: 2008 Tax Statistics, National Treasury and SARS SACU Revenue Share Formula 1. Customs component – Country’s share of intra-SACU trade, including reexports 2. Excise component – Based on GDP, net of development component 3. Development component – Set at 15% of total excise pool – GDP p.c. vs average SACU GDP p.c. – GDP < SACU average: compensated Source: 2008 Tax Statistics, National Treasury and SARS SACU Economic Indicators Botswana Lesotho Namibia South Africa Swaziland GDP per capita R51.4k R6.3k R26.4k R41.1k R18.6k To SACU pool (07/08) R0.2bn R0.1bn R0.4bn R45.4bn R0.1bn From SACU pool (07/08) R9.0bn R4.1bn R6.6bn R21.5bn R4.9bn Win or loose R8.8bn R4.0bn R6.2bn R23.9bn R4.8bn Out:In Ratio 45x 41x 16x 0.5x 49x SACU receipt : GDP 10.3% 36.3% 12.5% 1.1% 23.9% SACU : state revenue 34.8% 91.2% 50.4% 4.5% 88.5% *Calculated using average R/$7.05 Source: 2008 Tax Statistics, IMF, own calculations Expenditure “Budget priorities for the period ahead are focused on social solidarity and building a more equitable society” (Source: 2008 MTBPS) Expenditure Rein in Expenditure Lower foreign debt Spending Priorities Expenditure: Functional Classification (2008/09 Est.) 8% 1% 16% 16% 54% 19% 15% 6% General Gov State Debt Cost Social Dev. 8% 11% Protection Serv. Other Housing, Com Dev. Eco. & Infra. Education Health Social Expenditure Source: Various budgets, own calculations 2008/09 in Review: Expenditure Budget ’08 MTBPS ’08 Efficient Estimate Diff. (%) Voted Amounts 345.3 370.2 366.4 21.1 (6.1%) Central Gov.* 48.4 51.6 48.9 0.5 (1.0%) Fin. & Admin. 23.6 33.8 31.1 7.5 (31.8%) Social Services 117.3 121.0 118.1 0.8 (0.7%) Justice & Protect. 88.7 90.3 93.2 4.4 (5.1%) Eco. & Infrastruc. 67.2 73.5 75.0 7.8 (11.6%) State Debt Cost 51.2 54.0 52.7 1.5 (2.9%) Transfer Provinces 199.4 204.0 205.2 5.7 (2.9%) Other 15.2 7.3 14.1 -1.1 (-3.9%) Total 611.1 635.5 638.8 27.7 (4.5%) R bn * Includes: Provincial and local government Balance/Debt Revenue and Expenditure Fiscal Balance Budget balance adjusted for cash flows, to GDP 1 0 -1 -2 -3 -4 -5 1996 1998 2000 2002 2004 2006 2008 2010 Source: SARB Forecast: Efficient Group State Debt Total national State Debt, to GDP 50 Domestic debt: R485.5bn 40 Foreign debt: R81.9bn 30 20 10 1996 1998 2000 2002 2004 2006 2008 2010 Source: SARB Forecast: MTBPS, Efficient The Grey Area - Applying Monetary Policy the Fiscal Way! ‘Loss’ paid by State to SARB: Interest received = 3% Interest Paid = 8% Liquidity drainage “Cost” = R3bn Source: SARB, Treasury Summary 2008/09 Budget ’08 MTBPS ’08 Efficient Estimate Difference (Eff – Budget) Revenue 625.4 626.5 617.2 -8.1 Expenditure 611.1 635.5 638.8 27.7 (Deficit)/Surplus 14.3 -8.9 -21.6 35.9 +0.6% -0.4% -0.9% % of GDP Budget 2009/10 Reality Check! Summary 2009/10 Budget ’08 MTBPS ’08 Efficient Estimate Revenue 692.9 682.9 667.2 Expenditure 681.3 735.0 749.6 11.6 -52.1 -82.4 +0.5% -2.0% -3.4% (Deficit)/Surplus % of GDP Expenditure Trev’s Plans… (MTBPS) “Achieving Social Solidarity and Equitable society” Budget Priorities • • • Education – Broaden employment opportunities – Raise productivity Health – Human resource capacity – Child mortality – HIV, TB, etc. Crime Prevention – Detective and investigation services – Improving court processes • Infrastructure – Water, sanitation, housing, electricity, public transport • (Rural ) Poverty Alleviation – Raise rural incomes – Improve livelihoods (access to arable land, agri services) Infrastructure Spending • Public sector infrastructure spending, R568.1bn (+18.0% y/y/) over medium term (Expect R70bn+ more) • Capex to total expenditure expected to rise from 6.3% in 2004/05 to 11.0% in 2010/11 (MTBPS 2008) On Whose Books? Credit Rating? • • • • Total: R342.8bn 73% Generation 12% Transmission 10% Distribution Many Smiles… Social Grants Beneficiary Numbers Grant Type (‘000) 2003 2006 2007 2008 (projected) % Change 2003-2008 Old Age Grant 2,022 2,144 2,195 2,225 10% Disability Grant 953 1,319 1,422 1,409 47.8% 4 3 2 2 -50.0% Foster Care Grant 138 313 400 446 223.2% Care Dependency Grant (disabled) 58 94 98 110 89.7% Child Support 2,630 7,045 7,863 8,208 212.1% Total 5,808 10,918 11,991 12,402 106.5% War Veterans Grant Source: 2008 Budget 2008: 12.5m recipients 26.0% of SA population Fraud!! – R1bn annually Changes to Social Grants Grant Type (R) 2007 2008 2009 Efficient Est Cost to State Old Age Grant – men age 61 (63) 870 940 1050 R3.0bn Disability Grant 870 940 1050 R1.8bn War Veterans Grant 890 960 1080 R0.0bn Foster Care Grant 620 650 720 R0.4bn Care Dependency Grant (disabled) 870 940 1050 R0.2bn 200 220 250 R3.0bn + (R3.0bn?) 200 210 240 Child Support 18yrs? Grant in Aid (full-time attendance) n/a Source: 2008 Budget Additional: R8.3bn (R11.3bn?) Other Expenditure Surge in Social Spending Wage Subsidy (<R46k) Job Security/ UIF More for Education and Health More for Land Reform Budget Service delivery to get more and more Capital spending World Cup Housing Let’s hope; safety and security - World Cup JZ’s Plans… (Manifesto) Spending Plans.. Education Health Poverty Alleviation Manifesto ? ? ? Budget 2008/09 R120.5bn R72.9bn R105.1bn TOTAL R120.5bn R72.9bn R105.1bn Manifesto: Education Approximate Cost to Taxpayer p/y 60.0% of Schools No-Fee R2.0bn Recruiting 15 000 Pre-School teachers/helpers ? Sport Facilities for Poorer Schools ? Free School Feeding for all poor pupils ? TOTAL R2.0bn Spending Plans.. Education Health Poverty Alleviation Manifesto R2.0bn+ ? ? Budget 2008/09 R120.5bn R72.9bn R105.1bn TOTAL R122.5bn R72.9bn R105.1bn Manifesto: Health Approximate Cost to Taxpayer p/y Hire More Nurses on Better Pay Scales R? Reopening of Training Colleges R? Boosting fight against HIV/Aids R? Publicly Funded National Health Insurance System within next 5 yrs R? TOTAL R?bn Spending Plans.. Education Health Poverty Alleviation Manifesto R2.0bn+ Rbn? ? Budget 2008/09 R120.5bn R72.9bn R105.1bn TOTAL R122.5bn R72.9bn R105.1bn Manifesto: Poverty Alleviation Approximate Cost to Taxpayer p/y Raising cut-off age to 18yrs for child support grant R3.0bn Extension of unemployed insurance to cover more unemployed adults R17.0bn “Active measures” to cushion poor from global financial crisis R20.0bn TOTAL R40.0bn Spending Plans.. Manifesto Education Health Poverty Alleviation R2.0bn+ Rbn? R40bn+ Budget Deficit:GDP = 5.0% ? Budget R120.5bn R72.9bn R105.1bn 2008/09 (3.4% prev) TOTAL R122.5bn R72.9bn R145.1bn Taxpayer’s Pains… The Salary Story…. Total Remuneration Salaries/ GDP @ cap Salaries/ Ave Grant p yr President R 2,107,224 51 187 Speaker: National Assembly R 1,896,546 46 168 Minister R 1,612,053 39 143 Deputy Minister R 1,327,560 32 118 House Chairperson R 1,232,766 30 109 R 1,043,067 25 93 R 691,641 17 61 R 322,899 8 29 Parliamentary Council: President Member of Parliament Municipal Counselor Qualified Audit Opinions: General Report of the Auditor General on Audit Outcomes for the Financial Year 2006-07 Department Arts & Culture, Sport & Recreation Public Works Independent Complaints Directorate Land Affairs Transport Labour Justice Parliament Health Defence Correctional Services Water Affairs & Forestry Home Affairs 2002-03 2003-04 2004-05 2005-06 2006-07 Introducing… The White Elephants Elephant #1: SAA Public vs Private SAA Comair 2006: Profit/(Loss) (R883.0m) R 78.8m 2007: Profit/(Loss) (R850 m) R 109.2m Employee/ Aircraft Ratio Profit..“Restructuring costs” 8 227/58 = 1559/23 = 147 68 Dumbo 2 & Dumbo 3: Sentech Denel (R85.3m) (R 1,3 bn) 2007: Profit/(Loss) (R 17.6m) (R 549.1m) 2008: Profit/(Loss) R17.5m (R 347.2m) TOTAL RECEIPTS (R 85.4 M) R 457 M (R 2,2 BN) R 2.0 BN 2006: Profit/(Loss) Revenue Mercy Please Trev? Efficient’s Possible, Likely, Probable New Tax Table 2008/09 Taxable Inc (R) 2009/10 Rates of Tax 0 – 122 500 18% Taxable Inc (R) Rates of Tax 0 – 135 000 18% 122 501 – 195 000 R21 960 + 25% 135 001 – 210 000 R24 300 + 25% 195 001 – 270 000 R40 210 + 30% 210 001 – 300 000 R43 050 + 30% 270 001 – 380 000 R62 710 + 35% 300 001 – 420 000 R70 050 + 35% 380 001 – 490 000 R101 210 + 38% 420 001 – 550 000 R112 050 + 38% 490 001 – R143 010 + 40% 550 001 – R161 450 + 40% Rebates Primary Rebates 8 280 Primary Tax Threshold Below 65 9 000 Tax Threshold 46 000 Below 65 50 000 Effect of Adjustment Income 2008/09 Tax 2009/10 Tax Difference R100k R9 720 R9 000 R720 (7.4%) R150k R20 555 R19 050 R1 505 (7.3%) R200k R33 430 R31 550 R1 880 (5.6%) R300k R64 930 R61 050 R3 880 (6.0%) R400k R100 530 R96 050 R4 480 (4.5%) R500k R138 730 R133 450 R5 280 (3.8%) “Cost” = R8.0bn Do not cover inflation! Income Tax: Indiv. & Companies Type 2008/09 Possible changes ? Medical Aid Contributions R570 first two members (R530, +7.6%) R345 second members (R320) R630 first two members (10.5%) R380 second members (10.5%) Interest Exemption R19 000 (R18k) R25 000 Capital Gains Tax R16 000 (R15k) R20 000 10% Replaced by Dividend withholding tax STC SME Presumptive Turnover Tax < R100k Include Professional service providers? (accountants, optometrist Zero R100 001 – R300k 2.0% > 100k R300 001 – R500k R4000 + 4.0% R500 001 – R750k R12 000 + 5.5% R750 001 – R1m R25 750 + 7.5% Bracket Adjustment Carbon Tax Paying for your footprint? • 2008 Budget Proposal: – – • • • R100/ton on carbon dioxide equivalent Increased to R250/ton by 2010 SA economy based on (low priced) carbon intensive energy Involve electricity demand management, renewable energy and reduction in emissions (Min. V Schalkwyk) Cap-and-trade system (Deloitte) – Incentivise behavioral change Large Industrial Projects • • • R5bn of tax incentives for ‘large projects’ meeting SA’s ‘industrial-policy objectives’ R10bn over next three years To replace oversubscribed strategic industrial projects incentive. Electricity Levy – – – – Where’s the incentive? Where’s the alternative? Estimated R2.0bn to revenue in 2008/09 and R4bn in 2009/2010. 2c/kWh up to 4c/kWh? Life’s Little Pleasures Sin Taxes’ contribution to state revenue fiscal 2008/09 (09/10): Beer R5.5bn (R5.8bn) + Wine and spirits R3.0bn (R4.3bn) + Cigarettes R8.5bn (R9.6bn) = R17.0bn (2.8% of revenue) (R19.7bn) (2.9% exp) Disposable income under pressure…? What Else… Forex Controls - Blessing or Burden? • Blessings: – Protect from risky international investments – We need to keep capital in SA – “Unpatriotic” • Burdens: – Capital should be free to flow to highest yield – Limits business and economic growth – Complicates international investment structures – The return of the “FORWARD BOOK” Cost of Forex Controls Source: SARB Talking about the SARB… Central Banker Country GDP @ cap PPP $ Salaries, Salaries/ PPP $ GDP p cap CPI Joseph Yam Hong Kong 44,413 913,262 20.6 2.7% Mervyn King BOE 36,571 440,063 12.0 3.1% ECB 33,882 289,352 8.5 1.1% SARB 10,187 814,751 80.0 10.1% Mark Carney Canada 39,339 297,617 7.6 1.2% Ben Bernanke US 47,025 144,059 3.1 0.1%* Jean-Claude Trichet Tito Mboweni * y/y, all urban consumers … or a jump to the reality! An (affordable?) Wish List Based on fiscal 2008/09 estimates Tax Category PIT (Mid/high income) Company tax Wishes Granted in 2008 We want more! Lower Lower Lower ✓ Lower (i.e. R5.8bn loss in revenue, per 1%) STC Lower/Scrap Scrap (R20.0bn loss) VAT Higher Higher (i.e. R11.0bn gain in revenue, per 1%) Transfer duty Abolish Abolish (R6.0bn loss) Lower/Scrap Lower/Scrap (SACU outflow!!) Customs Duties Small comp. VAT returns Flat tax rate Lower frequency/Higher threshold ✓ 22% … or just a jump? Manuel: Lucky number 13? Possible successors: • Mandisi Mphalwa (Min. trade and industry) • Ndlanhla Nene (Deputy Finance minister) • Cyril Ramaphosa (businessman, ex politician) • Max Sisulu (ANC national executive committee) Authourised Financial Services Provider – FSP No: 859 www.efgroup.co.za