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Does the South African GAAR criteria of the "misuse or abuse" of a provision included in Section 80A(c)(ii) of the Income Tax Act add any value?

Tax planning, where taxpayers arrange their affairs so as to minimize the resulting tax liability, has evolved over the last couple of decades as a result of the change in the way business is conducted by virtue of globalisation and the development in technology. It appears to have become more and m...

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Main Author: Langenhoven, Allenda Glynn
Other Authors: Roeleveld, Jennifer
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Department of Finance and Tax 2017
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access_status_str Open Access
author Langenhoven, Allenda Glynn
author2 Roeleveld, Jennifer
author_browse Langenhoven, Allenda Glynn
Roeleveld, Jennifer
author_facet Roeleveld, Jennifer
Langenhoven, Allenda Glynn
author_sort Langenhoven, Allenda Glynn
collection Thesis
description Tax planning, where taxpayers arrange their affairs so as to minimize the resulting tax liability, has evolved over the last couple of decades as a result of the change in the way business is conducted by virtue of globalisation and the development in technology. It appears to have become more and more aggressive as taxpayers have the opportunity to access tax benefits not only through utilising loopholes in domestic legislation, but also through international tax loopholes. Revenue Authorities have to respond to this by employing mitigating anti-avoidance mechanisms. One such mechanism employed in South Africa ("SA") is the use of General anti-avoidance Rules ("GAAR") found in s80A-L of the Income Tax Act No. 58 of 1962 ("ITA"). To combat certain shortcomings in this GAAR's predecessor and to stay abreast of international trends, for the first time ever, a Statutory Purpose Element has been included in GAAR. This Statutory Purpose Element, as included in s80A(c)(ii) of the ITA, evaluates the misuse or abuse of the provisions of the ITA as a means to identify impermissible tax avoidance arrangements. Essentially, this calls for the application of the modern approach to statutory interpretation, where the purpose and context of the provisions of the ITA are first identified, before the misuse or abuse of these provisions can be proven. This study evaluates whether the inclusion of this Statutory Purpose Element in GAAR, adds any value or provides any additional powers to SARS when applying GAAR, especially in light of s39(2) included in the Bill of Rights of the Constitution, of 1996, ("Constitution"). The Constitution, the supreme law in SA, already calls for the modern approach to be applied to any statutory interpretation and the findings of this study indicate that s80A(c)(ii) appears to be completely superfluous as it does not award any additional powers to SARS, which were not already granted by the Constitution. If anything, s80A(c)(ii) broadens the scope of GAAR to such an extent, that it most likely will only cause further confusion for taxpayers wanting to engage in tax planning.
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provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
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spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/22857 Does the South African GAAR criteria of the "misuse or abuse" of a provision included in Section 80A(c)(ii) of the Income Tax Act add any value? Langenhoven, Allenda Glynn Roeleveld, Jennifer South African Taxation Tax planning, where taxpayers arrange their affairs so as to minimize the resulting tax liability, has evolved over the last couple of decades as a result of the change in the way business is conducted by virtue of globalisation and the development in technology. It appears to have become more and more aggressive as taxpayers have the opportunity to access tax benefits not only through utilising loopholes in domestic legislation, but also through international tax loopholes. Revenue Authorities have to respond to this by employing mitigating anti-avoidance mechanisms. One such mechanism employed in South Africa ("SA") is the use of General anti-avoidance Rules ("GAAR") found in s80A-L of the Income Tax Act No. 58 of 1962 ("ITA"). To combat certain shortcomings in this GAAR's predecessor and to stay abreast of international trends, for the first time ever, a Statutory Purpose Element has been included in GAAR. This Statutory Purpose Element, as included in s80A(c)(ii) of the ITA, evaluates the misuse or abuse of the provisions of the ITA as a means to identify impermissible tax avoidance arrangements. Essentially, this calls for the application of the modern approach to statutory interpretation, where the purpose and context of the provisions of the ITA are first identified, before the misuse or abuse of these provisions can be proven. This study evaluates whether the inclusion of this Statutory Purpose Element in GAAR, adds any value or provides any additional powers to SARS when applying GAAR, especially in light of s39(2) included in the Bill of Rights of the Constitution, of 1996, ("Constitution"). The Constitution, the supreme law in SA, already calls for the modern approach to be applied to any statutory interpretation and the findings of this study indicate that s80A(c)(ii) appears to be completely superfluous as it does not award any additional powers to SARS, which were not already granted by the Constitution. If anything, s80A(c)(ii) broadens the scope of GAAR to such an extent, that it most likely will only cause further confusion for taxpayers wanting to engage in tax planning. 2017-01-20T10:35:29Z 2017-01-20T10:35:29Z 2016 Master Thesis Masters MCom http://hdl.handle.net/11427/22857 eng application/pdf Department of Finance and Tax Faculty of Commerce University of Cape Town
spellingShingle South African Taxation
Langenhoven, Allenda Glynn
Does the South African GAAR criteria of the "misuse or abuse" of a provision included in Section 80A(c)(ii) of the Income Tax Act add any value?
thesis_degree_str Master's
title Does the South African GAAR criteria of the "misuse or abuse" of a provision included in Section 80A(c)(ii) of the Income Tax Act add any value?
title_full Does the South African GAAR criteria of the "misuse or abuse" of a provision included in Section 80A(c)(ii) of the Income Tax Act add any value?
title_fullStr Does the South African GAAR criteria of the "misuse or abuse" of a provision included in Section 80A(c)(ii) of the Income Tax Act add any value?
title_full_unstemmed Does the South African GAAR criteria of the "misuse or abuse" of a provision included in Section 80A(c)(ii) of the Income Tax Act add any value?
title_short Does the South African GAAR criteria of the "misuse or abuse" of a provision included in Section 80A(c)(ii) of the Income Tax Act add any value?
title_sort does the south african gaar criteria of the misuse or abuse of a provision included in section 80a c ii of the income tax act add any value
topic South African Taxation
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/22857
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