Cloud computing activities: Guidelines on the South African income tax classification

The classification of income from cloud computing activities, according to the substance-over-form doctrine, is fundamental to the application of the correct taxation source test. The designation of IaaS, PaaS and SaaS, the three main cloud computing service models, clearly denotes the form of cloud...

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Main Authors: Shené Steenkamp, Rudie Nel
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: AOSIS 2016-03-01
Series:Journal of Economic and Financial Sciences
Subjects:
Online Access:https://jefjournal.org.za/index.php/jef/article/view/39
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spelling doaj-5e7c87fd768a4566bc99fd7c1fcf749a2021-03-02T09:51:42ZengAOSISJournal of Economic and Financial Sciences1995-70762312-28032016-03-019122824310.4102/jef.v9i1.3937Cloud computing activities: Guidelines on the South African income tax classificationShené Steenkamp0Rudie Nel1School of Accountancy, Stellenbosch UniversitySchool of Accountancy, Stellenbosch UniversityThe classification of income from cloud computing activities, according to the substance-over-form doctrine, is fundamental to the application of the correct taxation source test. The designation of IaaS, PaaS and SaaS, the three main cloud computing service models, clearly denotes the form of cloud computing activities as that of a service. However, the nature of cloud computing inherently raises the question of whether or not cloud computing income should not rather be classified as income from leasing activities or the imparting of know-how. In fact, the findings of this study suggest the classification would not necessarily always be that of a service. The possible classification as lease income can be either income from the lease of tangible computer hardware and/or of intellectual property (royalty income). The aim of this study was to formulate guidelines to assist in the correct classification of income from cloud computing activities. This was achieved by performing doctrinal research based on the South African and international literature.https://jefjournal.org.za/index.php/jef/article/view/39Income tax classificationsection 9 of Income Tax ActCloud computingKnow-howLeaseIntellectual propertyRoyalties
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Shené Steenkamp
Rudie Nel
spellingShingle Shené Steenkamp
Rudie Nel
Cloud computing activities: Guidelines on the South African income tax classification
Journal of Economic and Financial Sciences
Income tax classification
section 9 of Income Tax Act
Cloud computing
Know-how
Lease
Intellectual property
Royalties
author_facet Shené Steenkamp
Rudie Nel
author_sort Shené Steenkamp
title Cloud computing activities: Guidelines on the South African income tax classification
title_short Cloud computing activities: Guidelines on the South African income tax classification
title_full Cloud computing activities: Guidelines on the South African income tax classification
title_fullStr Cloud computing activities: Guidelines on the South African income tax classification
title_full_unstemmed Cloud computing activities: Guidelines on the South African income tax classification
title_sort cloud computing activities: guidelines on the south african income tax classification
publisher AOSIS
series Journal of Economic and Financial Sciences
issn 1995-7076
2312-2803
publishDate 2016-03-01
description The classification of income from cloud computing activities, according to the substance-over-form doctrine, is fundamental to the application of the correct taxation source test. The designation of IaaS, PaaS and SaaS, the three main cloud computing service models, clearly denotes the form of cloud computing activities as that of a service. However, the nature of cloud computing inherently raises the question of whether or not cloud computing income should not rather be classified as income from leasing activities or the imparting of know-how. In fact, the findings of this study suggest the classification would not necessarily always be that of a service. The possible classification as lease income can be either income from the lease of tangible computer hardware and/or of intellectual property (royalty income). The aim of this study was to formulate guidelines to assist in the correct classification of income from cloud computing activities. This was achieved by performing doctrinal research based on the South African and international literature.
topic Income tax classification
section 9 of Income Tax Act
Cloud computing
Know-how
Lease
Intellectual property
Royalties
url https://jefjournal.org.za/index.php/jef/article/view/39
work_keys_str_mv AT shenesteenkamp cloudcomputingactivitiesguidelinesonthesouthafricanincometaxclassification
AT rudienel cloudcomputingactivitiesguidelinesonthesouthafricanincometaxclassification
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