The nature and extent of the book-tax gap from a South African perspective

M.Comm. (International Accounting) === Recently, there has been a spate of reported cases of large corporate entities paying very little, or no income tax, despite the appearance of being profitable. Enron conducted a lot of business through special purpose vehicle (SPV) companies that were structur...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Moore, Dominique
Published: 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10210/8753
id ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-uj-uj-7860
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-uj-uj-78602017-09-16T04:01:27ZThe nature and extent of the book-tax gap from a South African perspectiveMoore, DominiqueBook-tax gapIncome tax - South AfricaAccounting - Standards - South AfricaIncome maintenance programsM.Comm. (International Accounting)Recently, there has been a spate of reported cases of large corporate entities paying very little, or no income tax, despite the appearance of being profitable. Enron conducted a lot of business through special purpose vehicle (SPV) companies that were structured specifically for the purpose of paying very little, if any, corporate tax, without having to reduce reported book net profits to achieve this. A study in October 2012 of Starbucks by Reuters found that the company had reported no profits and had paid no income tax for the previous 3 financial years in the United Kingdom despite sales of 1.2 billion pounds. By comparison, McDonalds had to pay tax of 80 million pounds based on a turnover of 3.6 billion pounds, and KFC paid 36 million pounds in taxes on 1.1 billion pounds turnover in the United Kingdom. Another company highlighted for paying no tax is the giant Internet company, Ebay. In its latest financial period the company paid 1 million pounds in tax, on a turnover of 800 million pounds. Again complicated tax structures are at the centre of the tax computation. Consideration has to be given to the role played by the accounting standards, if any, in this scenario, and the extent of the role played by accounting treatments. One has to question if accounting treatments are enabling companies to consistently pay lower rates of tax than is statutorily required, through mechanisms like the raising of deferred tax, or whether it is simply a question of the relevant tax legislation being formulated in a way that allows taxable income to be lower than accounting income. The extent of this book-tax gap and the amount of tax actually paid by companies have been researched to a limited degree. Several studies have been conducted on the financial results from the 1990s, where a consistent decline in the collection of tax by authorities, despite the economic boom that was in existence at that time, has been shown. Research in the 2000s tends to confirm the continuance of this trend of an ever-increasing book-tax gap. The general consensus from the literature review conducted is that the divergence between book income and taxable income is a growing trend, and taxes actually paid by corporates are declining and are on average lower than statutory tax rates.2013-12-09Thesisuj:7860http://hdl.handle.net/10210/8753University of Johannesburg
collection NDLTD
sources NDLTD
topic Book-tax gap
Income tax - South Africa
Accounting - Standards - South Africa
Income maintenance programs
spellingShingle Book-tax gap
Income tax - South Africa
Accounting - Standards - South Africa
Income maintenance programs
Moore, Dominique
The nature and extent of the book-tax gap from a South African perspective
description M.Comm. (International Accounting) === Recently, there has been a spate of reported cases of large corporate entities paying very little, or no income tax, despite the appearance of being profitable. Enron conducted a lot of business through special purpose vehicle (SPV) companies that were structured specifically for the purpose of paying very little, if any, corporate tax, without having to reduce reported book net profits to achieve this. A study in October 2012 of Starbucks by Reuters found that the company had reported no profits and had paid no income tax for the previous 3 financial years in the United Kingdom despite sales of 1.2 billion pounds. By comparison, McDonalds had to pay tax of 80 million pounds based on a turnover of 3.6 billion pounds, and KFC paid 36 million pounds in taxes on 1.1 billion pounds turnover in the United Kingdom. Another company highlighted for paying no tax is the giant Internet company, Ebay. In its latest financial period the company paid 1 million pounds in tax, on a turnover of 800 million pounds. Again complicated tax structures are at the centre of the tax computation. Consideration has to be given to the role played by the accounting standards, if any, in this scenario, and the extent of the role played by accounting treatments. One has to question if accounting treatments are enabling companies to consistently pay lower rates of tax than is statutorily required, through mechanisms like the raising of deferred tax, or whether it is simply a question of the relevant tax legislation being formulated in a way that allows taxable income to be lower than accounting income. The extent of this book-tax gap and the amount of tax actually paid by companies have been researched to a limited degree. Several studies have been conducted on the financial results from the 1990s, where a consistent decline in the collection of tax by authorities, despite the economic boom that was in existence at that time, has been shown. Research in the 2000s tends to confirm the continuance of this trend of an ever-increasing book-tax gap. The general consensus from the literature review conducted is that the divergence between book income and taxable income is a growing trend, and taxes actually paid by corporates are declining and are on average lower than statutory tax rates.
author Moore, Dominique
author_facet Moore, Dominique
author_sort Moore, Dominique
title The nature and extent of the book-tax gap from a South African perspective
title_short The nature and extent of the book-tax gap from a South African perspective
title_full The nature and extent of the book-tax gap from a South African perspective
title_fullStr The nature and extent of the book-tax gap from a South African perspective
title_full_unstemmed The nature and extent of the book-tax gap from a South African perspective
title_sort nature and extent of the book-tax gap from a south african perspective
publishDate 2013
url http://hdl.handle.net/10210/8753
work_keys_str_mv AT mooredominique thenatureandextentofthebooktaxgapfromasouthafricanperspective
AT mooredominique natureandextentofthebooktaxgapfromasouthafricanperspective
_version_ 1718535547308212224