The notion of Human Capital Accumulation as a basis for reform of select employment related tax incentives in Kenya and South Africa

Human capital signifies the idea that skills and capabilities embodied in human beings constitute a form of capital. The collection of human skills and capabilities i.e. human capital, in a country, represents the human capital accumulation in that economy. This human capital accumulation is achieve...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Mwaja, Christine Mukami
Other Authors: Hattingh, Johann
Format: Dissertation
Language:English
Published: Faculty of Law 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11427/32882
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spelling ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-uct-oai-localhost-11427-328822021-02-19T05:13:59Z The notion of Human Capital Accumulation as a basis for reform of select employment related tax incentives in Kenya and South Africa Mwaja, Christine Mukami Hattingh, Johann Commercial Law Human capital signifies the idea that skills and capabilities embodied in human beings constitute a form of capital. The collection of human skills and capabilities i.e. human capital, in a country, represents the human capital accumulation in that economy. This human capital accumulation is achieved through a process of instilling, building up and developing skills and capabilities. This dissertation considers use of tax incentives to contribute to human capital accumulation in Kenya and South Africa. Currently, there are some indirect tax incentives in both countries which give favourable treatment to some employee related expenses. There also exists, in both Kenya and South Africa, a direct employer tax incentive aimed at encouraging employment of graduates and specific job seekers. In both countries, however, there is no broad direct tax incentive that benefits all employers who contribute to developing various other forms of human capital. The dissertation therefore looks at considerations and reforms which are necessary to establish a desirable tax incentive for employers in Kenya and South Africa that contributes to human capital accumulation. Some of the considerations which the dissertation looks at include; why employers should be given the incentive, why the incentive should be direct, whether the existing tax incentives meet the goal of human capital accumulation and the relevance of human capital accumulation to Kenya and South Africa. The dissertation also suggests some reforms that should be made in developing a desirable direct tax incentive for employers. The suggested reforms are based on deficiencies identified from an evaluation of the like direct employment incentive schemes offered by Kenya and South Africa to employers to encourage employment of graduates and specific job seekers. 2021-02-17T13:32:30Z 2021-02-17T13:32:30Z 2020_ 2021-02-17T07:06:42Z Master Thesis Masters LLM http://hdl.handle.net/11427/32882 eng application/pdf Faculty of Law Department of Commercial Law
collection NDLTD
language English
format Dissertation
sources NDLTD
topic Commercial Law
spellingShingle Commercial Law
Mwaja, Christine Mukami
The notion of Human Capital Accumulation as a basis for reform of select employment related tax incentives in Kenya and South Africa
description Human capital signifies the idea that skills and capabilities embodied in human beings constitute a form of capital. The collection of human skills and capabilities i.e. human capital, in a country, represents the human capital accumulation in that economy. This human capital accumulation is achieved through a process of instilling, building up and developing skills and capabilities. This dissertation considers use of tax incentives to contribute to human capital accumulation in Kenya and South Africa. Currently, there are some indirect tax incentives in both countries which give favourable treatment to some employee related expenses. There also exists, in both Kenya and South Africa, a direct employer tax incentive aimed at encouraging employment of graduates and specific job seekers. In both countries, however, there is no broad direct tax incentive that benefits all employers who contribute to developing various other forms of human capital. The dissertation therefore looks at considerations and reforms which are necessary to establish a desirable tax incentive for employers in Kenya and South Africa that contributes to human capital accumulation. Some of the considerations which the dissertation looks at include; why employers should be given the incentive, why the incentive should be direct, whether the existing tax incentives meet the goal of human capital accumulation and the relevance of human capital accumulation to Kenya and South Africa. The dissertation also suggests some reforms that should be made in developing a desirable direct tax incentive for employers. The suggested reforms are based on deficiencies identified from an evaluation of the like direct employment incentive schemes offered by Kenya and South Africa to employers to encourage employment of graduates and specific job seekers.
author2 Hattingh, Johann
author_facet Hattingh, Johann
Mwaja, Christine Mukami
author Mwaja, Christine Mukami
author_sort Mwaja, Christine Mukami
title The notion of Human Capital Accumulation as a basis for reform of select employment related tax incentives in Kenya and South Africa
title_short The notion of Human Capital Accumulation as a basis for reform of select employment related tax incentives in Kenya and South Africa
title_full The notion of Human Capital Accumulation as a basis for reform of select employment related tax incentives in Kenya and South Africa
title_fullStr The notion of Human Capital Accumulation as a basis for reform of select employment related tax incentives in Kenya and South Africa
title_full_unstemmed The notion of Human Capital Accumulation as a basis for reform of select employment related tax incentives in Kenya and South Africa
title_sort notion of human capital accumulation as a basis for reform of select employment related tax incentives in kenya and south africa
publisher Faculty of Law
publishDate 2021
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/32882
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