Revenue service of the South African government
South African Revenue Service Formed 1 October 1997; 27 years ago (1997-10-01 ) Preceding agencies Department of Inland Revenue Department of Customs and Excise Jurisdiction Government of South Africa Headquarters Lehae la Sars BuildingPretoria , South Africa Employees 12,479 (2020/21)[ 1] Minister responsible Agency executive Edward Kieswetter, Commissioner Parent department National Treasury Key document Website sars .gov .za
25°46′22.06″S 28°13′56.13″E / 25.7727944°S 28.2322583°E / -25.7727944; 28.2322583 The South African Revenue Service (SARS ) is the revenue service of the South African government . It administers the country's tax system and customs service , and enforces compliance with related legislation.[ 2] It is governed by the SARS Act 34 of 1997, which established it as "an organ of state within the public administration, but as an institution outside the public service."[ 1] It thus has a significant degree of administrative autonomy, although it is under the policy control of the Minister of Finance .[ 1] Effectively, SARS manages, administers, and implements the tax regime as designed by the Minister and National Treasury .
SARS was established in 1997 by a merger of the customs and inland revenue departments, at the recommendation of the Katz Commission , which had been instituted to review the South African tax system for the post-apartheid era. In subsequent years, under the leadership of Pravin Gordhan , SARS gained a reputation for effectiveness.[ 3] [ 4] [ 5] [ 6] However, between 2014 and 2018, the agency's tax collection and investigative capacities were severely undermined, or even "decimated,"[ 7] as a result of a restructuring which has been called a "premeditated offensive,"[ 8] allegedly calculated to enable the capture of SARS.[ 9] [ 10] [ 11] [ 12] Such allegations were investigated by the 2018 Nugent Commission.
^ a b c Annual report 2020/21 (PDF) . Pretoria: South African Revenue Service. 2021. ISBN 978-0-621-48819-7 .
^ "About SARS" . South African Revenue Service . Retrieved 2021-12-19 .
^ Ndlovu, Thatshisiwe (2017). "Fiscal Histories of Sub-Saharan Africa: the Case of South Africa" . Public Affairs Research Institute . Retrieved 2021-12-19 .
^ The capture and restructuring of the South African Revenue Service (SARS) (PDF) . Pretoria: The Platform to Protect Whistleblowers in Africa. 2021-03-24.
^ Hausman, David (2014-07-11). "Reworking the Revenue Service: Tax Collection in South Africa, 1999-2009" . Reworking the Revenue Service: Tax Collection in South Africa, 1999-2009 .
^ Smith, Laïla (2003). "The Power of Politics: The performance of the South African Revenue Service and some of its implications" . Policy: Issues and Actors 16 (2) . Johannesburg: Centre for Policy Studies. Retrieved 2021-12-19 .
^ Ensor, Linda (2021-04-29). "Encouraging signs of a revitalised Sars, says Edward Kieswetter" . Business Day . Retrieved 2021-12-19 .
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^ Marrian, Natasha (2019-07-02). "Sars and treasury to pursue criminal charges against Bain & Co" . The Mail & Guardian . Retrieved 2021-12-20 .
^ Merten, Marianne (2019-02-28). "State Capture wipes out third of SA's R4.9-trillion GDP – never mind lost trust, confidence, opportunity" . Daily Maverick . Retrieved 2021-12-20 .
^ Nicolson, Greg (2021-03-23). "Bain & Co planned to work with Zuma to 'reshape SA economy', says former partner Athol Williams" . Daily Maverick . Retrieved 2021-12-20 .
^ The Enablers: The Bankers, Accountants and Lawyers That Cashed In on State Capture (PDF) . Cape Town: Open Secrets. 2020. ISBN 978-0-620-86351-3 .