BUDGET 2024 – All your Budget 2024 Tax updates

Loading player...
GUEST – Musa Manyathi Director for Tax at Deloitte Africa

Fears that government would hike personal income tax or VAT in this year's Budget proved unfounded. But taxpayers will still be hit in different ways to help plug fiscal holes.

Government is struggling with ballooning debt payments, while its spending – especially on civil servant wages – has also soared in recent years.

Meanwhile, its tax revenue for the past year was R56 billion less than it expected a year ago.

Corporate tax payments took a large hit as companies struggled with load shedding in a weak economy. Tax from the mining sector halved to R39 billion in the first 10 months of the financial year due to lower commodity prices, power cuts and problems at ports.

Income from VAT was weaker due to an increase in refunds.

"High VAT refund payments resulted from increased investment in embedded generation and higher costs of doing business, including the use of more expensive road transport due to operational and maintenance failures in the rail network," Treasury said.

Income from fuel levies rose despite a decision last year to leave the fuel levy unchanged. The higher income was thanks to brisk fuel sales as the demand for road bulk transport increased, Treasury said. More trucks are on the road due to the collapsing railways.

But cigarette tax income remains well below levels seen before the pandemic, when cigarette sales were banned – which saw a boom in black-market trade.

Personal income tax collection has remained buoyant, with salaries and bonuses in the finance sector seeing "strong" growth.

While personal income tax rates have not been hiked, tax tables weren't adjusted for inflation – which means workers will pay more tax due to "bracket creep".
21 Feb 2024 3PM English South Africa Business News · Investing

Other recent episodes

The Second Bond: The Hidden Costs Homebuyers Miss

Jonathan Kohler exposes the “second bond” — the monthly bill homeowners face before paying their actual home loan. From R4,000–R7,000 in Johannesburg and Cape Town to over R11,500 in Umhlanga, we unpack levies, utilities, maintenance, special levies and municipal tariffs that determine true affordability. A must‑listen for buyers, investors and…
1 Jul 1PM 27 min

SA New Vehicle Sales post strongest June result since 2007

South Africa’s new vehicle market delivered a standout June performance despite inflation, fuel price spikes and weaker consumer confidence. Dr Paulina Mamogobo, Chief Economist at NAAMSA, breaks down the domestic resilience, export pressures, shifting macroeconomic signals, and what these trends mean for the industry heading into the second half of…
1 Jul 12PM 20 min

Protests, Politics & State Capacity: What Today’s Unrest Signals

Anti‑immigration protests highlight deep governance failures, rising public frustration and the erosion of state authority. Professor William Gumede unpacks the political economy behind the unrest, the risks to social cohesion, the impact on investor confidence, and why South Africa urgently needs a coordinated, evidence‑based migration strategy.
30 Jun 5PM 22 min

One Labour Market, Three Data Sets: The Real Story Behind Jobs

GDP shows modest growth, QES shows formal job trends, and the QLFS reveals household‑level pressure. Together, they paint a complex picture of South Africa’s labour market. Statistician‑General Risenga Maluleke explains how these data sets interlink, where they diverge, and what they reveal about job creation.
30 Jun 5PM 20 min

SA TAX SEASON 2026 KICKS OFF: WHAT YOU NEED TO KNOW

South Africa’s tax season opens with new rules, new risks and widespread misconceptions. From two‑pot withdrawals taxed at marginal rates to multiple IRP5s, provisional tax surprises and auto‑assessment pitfalls. Stian De Witt from NMG Benefits explains the hidden traps catching ordinary South Africans
30 Jun 5PM 21 min