SA: SA Tax Ombud concerned about ‘political stability of the country’

26th February 2017

SA: SA Tax Ombud concerned about ‘political stability of the country’

Judge Bernard Ngoepe
Photo by: Unisa

“We (South Africans) must say to ourselves that our economy is not okay,” Judge Bernard Ngoepe, South Africa’s first Tax Ombud, said at a Leader’s Angle event hosted by the University of Stellenbosch Business School (USB) on Friday (24 February 2017).

He expressed his concerns by stating: “My ultimate question is: Do we really live in a political stable country that allows for a healthy economy?”

He said a huge deficit, large unemployment number and people depended on social grants are examples that South Africa’s economy is not well.

“We are becoming a corrupted society. People are employed based on their political connections,” he said.

He said one of the fundamental causes are that people are competing for scarce resources. “Hospitals are overstressed. People in leadership positions should address these fundamental problems.”

He added: “Just because there is a mere absence of civil war in the country does not imply that we are political stable as a country.

“When parliament opened over 400 soldiers of the defence force were deployed for law and order. Can you really argue that it is a political stable country? Something is not right.”

Commenting on the burden of tax collection,  he said he was concerned that the increased tax bracket will influence the culture of paying tax. “One of the basis for tax collection is that we are forced to pay it but I think people should also feel morally obliged to pay tax. If we don’t spend tax prudently then people will begin to justify their reluctance to pay tax.

“You never know in what form or way that reluctance will be expressed. Some people come up with very aggressive tax invasion schemes. We are losing billions and billions of Rands of money going out of the country as a result,” he said.

 

Issued by Jigsaw