International apportionment mechanisms for VAT inputs - Is the turnover basis the best mechanism for all retail industries in South Africa?

Apportionment of input VAT and the mechanisms used to calculate apportionment have been a challenging issue since the inception of the Value-Added Tax Act No. 89 of 1991 in South Africa. This requirement to apportion input VAT has particular relevance to the retail industry due to the increase in th...

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Main Author: Ritchie, Monique Adrienne
Other Authors: Roeleveld, Jennifer
Format: Dissertation
Language:English
Published: University of Cape Town 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11427/15746
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spelling ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-uct-oai-localhost-11427-157462020-10-06T05:11:07Z International apportionment mechanisms for VAT inputs - Is the turnover basis the best mechanism for all retail industries in South Africa? Ritchie, Monique Adrienne Roeleveld, Jennifer Taxation Apportionment of input VAT and the mechanisms used to calculate apportionment have been a challenging issue since the inception of the Value-Added Tax Act No. 89 of 1991 in South Africa. This requirement to apportion input VAT has particular relevance to the retail industry due to the increase in the extension of credit which results in the receipt of taxable supplies (ordinary sales) and exempt supplies (interest income). As retailers are therefore making mixed supplies, they are required to apportion the input VAT paid on expenses. At present the standard method for input VAT apportionment in South Africa is the turnover basis however this method is not perceived as equitable by credit retailers. After an in-depth analysis of the retail industry in South Africa, its relevance to the South African economy and the impact of the requirement to apportion input VAT using the turnover method on listed companies within the South African retail industry, this paper analyses the treatment of VAT apportionment by the South African Revenue Service within the context of the Value-Added Tax Act No. 89 of 1991 and relevant South African case law. Recommendations for South Africa are then sought by studying the mechanisms for input VAT apportionment used in countries with VAT systems similar to that of South Africa. Included in this study are those countries which employ traditional VAT systems such as European Union member states and Mexico; and those countries which have implemented modern VAT systems such as New Zealand, Singapore, Australia and Canada. In addition, alternative approaches to address the root cause of the requirement to apportion input VAT used internationally are researched to the extent that these mechanisms have application to the retail industry in South Africa. 2015-12-09T14:47:55Z 2015-12-09T14:47:55Z 2015 Master Thesis Masters MCom http://hdl.handle.net/11427/15746 eng application/pdf University of Cape Town Faculty of Commerce Department of Finance and Tax
collection NDLTD
language English
format Dissertation
sources NDLTD
topic Taxation
spellingShingle Taxation
Ritchie, Monique Adrienne
International apportionment mechanisms for VAT inputs - Is the turnover basis the best mechanism for all retail industries in South Africa?
description Apportionment of input VAT and the mechanisms used to calculate apportionment have been a challenging issue since the inception of the Value-Added Tax Act No. 89 of 1991 in South Africa. This requirement to apportion input VAT has particular relevance to the retail industry due to the increase in the extension of credit which results in the receipt of taxable supplies (ordinary sales) and exempt supplies (interest income). As retailers are therefore making mixed supplies, they are required to apportion the input VAT paid on expenses. At present the standard method for input VAT apportionment in South Africa is the turnover basis however this method is not perceived as equitable by credit retailers. After an in-depth analysis of the retail industry in South Africa, its relevance to the South African economy and the impact of the requirement to apportion input VAT using the turnover method on listed companies within the South African retail industry, this paper analyses the treatment of VAT apportionment by the South African Revenue Service within the context of the Value-Added Tax Act No. 89 of 1991 and relevant South African case law. Recommendations for South Africa are then sought by studying the mechanisms for input VAT apportionment used in countries with VAT systems similar to that of South Africa. Included in this study are those countries which employ traditional VAT systems such as European Union member states and Mexico; and those countries which have implemented modern VAT systems such as New Zealand, Singapore, Australia and Canada. In addition, alternative approaches to address the root cause of the requirement to apportion input VAT used internationally are researched to the extent that these mechanisms have application to the retail industry in South Africa.
author2 Roeleveld, Jennifer
author_facet Roeleveld, Jennifer
Ritchie, Monique Adrienne
author Ritchie, Monique Adrienne
author_sort Ritchie, Monique Adrienne
title International apportionment mechanisms for VAT inputs - Is the turnover basis the best mechanism for all retail industries in South Africa?
title_short International apportionment mechanisms for VAT inputs - Is the turnover basis the best mechanism for all retail industries in South Africa?
title_full International apportionment mechanisms for VAT inputs - Is the turnover basis the best mechanism for all retail industries in South Africa?
title_fullStr International apportionment mechanisms for VAT inputs - Is the turnover basis the best mechanism for all retail industries in South Africa?
title_full_unstemmed International apportionment mechanisms for VAT inputs - Is the turnover basis the best mechanism for all retail industries in South Africa?
title_sort international apportionment mechanisms for vat inputs - is the turnover basis the best mechanism for all retail industries in south africa?
publisher University of Cape Town
publishDate 2015
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/15746
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