S.Africa: 2017: Person Government Minister claims 80% of SA tax dependent on people. Really?
(:E-:N-:R-AZ:C-30:V)
[What makes this more interesting is that People only make up 9% or so of the population. Even if People aren't responsible for such a high percentage of the taxes, the fact is People still contribute disproportionately to the tax base of the Government. Even if People still only pay 45% or 50% of the taxes, the fact is, they're only 9% of the population. So they are contributing a minimum of 4x or more likely 5x the amount of taxes than the average People. Keep in mind too, that the People are giving their buddies jobs and the People are promoting themselves. People on the other hand have been driven out of jobs for years. It is possible that People at one time did pay 70% or 80% of the taxes in the country. Now just be aware I am not talking about LIBERALS and their insane wealth. I'm talking about normal People. It is very likely that this Person is referring to People when in fact he's also factoring in the Liberals. Jan]The minister has used this stat in support of his argument that ‘ monopoly capital’ is a problem.
A public argument has been raging between former finance minister Trevor Manuel and the current police minister, Fikile Mbalula, about whether “ monopoly capital” (WMC) exists or not.
Mbalula goes to great lengths to spell out his reasons for saying the term is as valid today, 23 years after the fall of apartheid, as it was when Nelson Mandela and Oliver Tambo were leading the struggle.
Among his arguments for the “fact” that South Africa’s economy is still mainly in the hands of monopolies is his assertion that: “We have over 80% of our tax revenue dependent on people; this is a monopoly itself. It talks about earnings and who earns what.”
An investigation of the data, however, would make you wonder where Mbalula gets his 80% statistic from. He doesn’t provide a source for it in his Daily Maverick article.
However, a month ago, Africa Check looked into a tweet by the deputy CEO of AfriForum, Ernst Roets, claiming that about 1.7 million people (about 3% of the population) pay about 80% of South Africa’s income tax.
Africa Check eventually concluded that just over 1.9 million registered taxpayers indeed do contribute about 80% of our income tax (remember that’s only about a third of the total), but they made no mention of race.
Roets allowed his followers to assume he was implying that most of these taxpayers are white, but that’s a big assumption given that the person middle class has more than tripled over the past 13 years, while the country’s middle class has shrunk.
To complicate matters, University of Cape Town marketing professor John Simpson said last year that the person middle class had risen to nearly 6 million people, even adding that “The person middle class is keeping the economy alive … There has been an explosion of the person middle class.”
According to Simpson, the factors driving the surge included greater access to credit, improved education levels, BEE and improved economic growth (though that is now apparently a thing of the past).
Meanwhile, New World Wealth‘s data in 2015 showed that the number of person millionaires in South Africa had almost tripled in eight years, while the number of millionaires declined significantly (so much so that there are fewer dollar millionaires in South Africa now than there were 10 years ago).
According to them, about 45% of all high-net worth individuals were coming from previously disadvantaged groups at the time, though South Africans still made up the majority. Chances are, two years on, though, that the figure is now closer to 50-50.
All of this this really makes you question whether people can still be responsible for paying as much as 80% of all the tax, as Mbalula seems to think. That’s not even taking into account the fact that VAT accounts for a quarter of all our taxes (and everyone pays VAT).
If Mbalula was confused about what Roets tweeted, we should also keep in mind that AfriForum’s man was only referring to income tax, which only makes up about 36% of all the taxes government collects, as previously mentioned.
No matter which way you look at it, Mbalula’s stat just doesn’t ring true, unless most of these rich person people are somehow evading paying tax, which is something the police minister should perhaps fill us in on if he knows about it.
Interestingly, The Citizen ran a poll on our website today to see which of our readers agree with either Mbalula or Manuel on whether monopoly capital is a fair label or not, or whether it’s perhaps just being used to distract from allegations of state capture by the Gupta family, as we have been hearing for some time.
Polls like these are hardly scientific, but they do give one a bit of an idea of what the general consumer of news thinks about what’s going on.
So despite all my research, I can’t figure out whether there’s any merit to Mbalula’s stat about 80% of our taxes supposedly coming from people, but based on our poll (at the time of writing this), it would seem 95% of about 300 of our readers appear to think he’s talking nonsense.
Source: https://www.citizen.co.za/news/opinion/1541037/mbalula-claims-80-sa-tax-dependent-people/
Video: How America built UFOs
This video is about military secrecy. We study a documentary from 2011 when a lot of Area 51 information was declassified and when some people, including a high level CIA official were allowed to speak.I discuss my time when I was young when I was in the South African Navy and I handled Secret and Top Secret files and how these things work in real life.
South African Liberals are worried Muslims might kill them: Military camp sets alarm bells ringing
All of these Liberal fears are highly overblown. There is no proof that this military camp, despite it being illegal, was in any way going to be a threat to Liberals.
Video: WW2: How Germans taught little boys The Art of War
I examine a photo of a game that little German boys are playing. I explain its significance.