Theme: Revenue administration
Responsible: South African Revenue Service / National Treasury
High impact, fiscally self-funding. SARS institutional recovery largely complete. AI audit capability and Large Business Centre staffing are the immediate investment priorities. Transfer pricing enforcement requires revised OECD-aligned DTAA legislation.
Who backs this reform, who needs convincing, and which interests or red lines shape political feasibility.
Backers
27
3 stakeholders
Negotiation weight
0
0 conditional actors
Opposition weight
0
0 opposing actors
Review coverage
0/3
All mapped stance notes are still draft
Provenance warning
Every mapped stakeholder stance for this idea is still draft. The coalition score is directional only until at least the high-influence actors are reviewed.
Coalition Read
Anchor: Presidency / Operation Vulindlela.
Political Tractability
No reviewed signals · 0% of mapped influence has been reviewed.
SARS capacity expansion is backed by the Presidency as a fiscally positive governance reform.
Interest: Cross-cutting structural reform coordination across energy, logistics, water, digital infrastructure, and visa reform. Operation Vulindlela, establish…
Concern: Implementation bottlenecks within line departments; regulatory capture of NERSA and ICASA; SOE institutional inertia; ensuring quick wins translate in…
Engagement path: Already fully engaged. Seeks line department buy-in, NEDLAC social compact legitimacy, and international DFI financing alignment on key reform milesto…
Treasury co-manages SARS capacity expansion, which yields R10-12 return per rand invested.
Interest: Fiscal consolidation with public debt stabilising below 75% of GDP; structural reforms that improve revenue without expanding contingent liabilities;…
Concern: Unfunded mandates in energy transition (JETP co-financing); Eskom's R400bn+ debt and how restructuring socialises costs; reform proposals that create…
Engagement path: Reforms must be fiscally neutral or revenue-positive over the MTEF window; SOE restructuring must demonstrably reduce contingent liabilities; credible…
SARB supports SARS capacity expansion as stronger revenue collection supports fiscal sustainability and monetary policy credibility.
Interest: Price stability under the 3–6% inflation targeting framework; financial system stability under the Twin Peaks prudential model; integrity of the Natio…
Concern: Fintech entry that could destabilise the payment system or create unregulated credit channels; fiscal dominance risks if public debt crowds out moneta…
Engagement path: Fintech reforms must operate within SARB's NPS oversight framework; fiscal reforms must maintain credible debt trajectory; new financial entrants requ…
SARS's institutional capacity was severely eroded during state capture (2014–2018), with revenue shortfalls estimated at R300+ billion over that period. The rebuilding programme under Commissioner Edward Kieswetter has restored staffing levels, re-established the High Wealth Individual unit and Large Business Centre, upgraded the SARS digital platform (eFiling, customs modernisation), and improved VAT refund processing. Revenue performance has recovered significantly, with tax-to-GDP ratio rising from under 24% to approximately 25.5% by 2024/25. Further reforms include expanding the third-party data ecosystem for automatic assessments, improving customs compliance through scanner investment at ports of entry, and deepening transfer pricing enforcement. SARS's effectiveness is a foundational fiscal institution reform — each percentage point improvement in the tax-to-GDP ratio generates approximately R70 billion in additional annual revenue at current GDP levels.
Referenced in OECD Economic Surveys: South Africa
OECD SA Survey (2017, 2020, 2022, 2025). Following up on State Capture Commission recommendations highlighted in the 2022 survey.
SARS's R19.3 billion revenue outperformance in 2025 demonstrates that administrative reform—not new taxes—is the most powerful available fiscal instrument. Doubling the yield would close South Africa's entire deficit gap. — MTBPS 2025 Fiscal Framework
SARS's R19.3 billion revenue outperformance in 2025 demonstrates that institutional capacity is the single highest-leverage fiscal reform. The 2024–2028 Strategic Plan targets expanding the tax base by 1.5 million taxpayers, recovering R150 billion in outstanding tax debt, and deploying AI-powered audit tools. VAT refund backlogs (harming business cash flow) and multinational transfer pricing (R60–80 billion annual base erosion gap) are the two highest-value compliance opportunities. Every R1 invested in SARS capacity returns R6–R10 in revenue — the best return on investment in the government portfolio.
Expand third-party data integration: mandate real-time data sharing from the Deeds Office (property transactions), banking institutions (bank transaction data under Section 70 of TAA), motor vehicle registration (eNaTIS), and short-term rental platforms (Airbnb, Booking.com)
Deploy AI-powered audit selection system across all tax types: risk-score all registered taxpayers, prioritise Large Business Centre transfer pricing cases, and auto-flag VAT refund anomalies using machine learning
Staff the Large Business Centre to full complement: recruit 180 additional transfer pricing specialists and multinational risk analysts (currently 30% vacant); partner with SAICA for a professional secondment programme
At independence in 1966, Botswana was one of the world's poorest countries. The BDP government created an independent Minerals Management department staffed by meritocratic civil servants and established the Pula Fund to sterilise diamond revenue windfalls. Botswana sustained 9%+ per-capita GDP growth for 25 years (1966–1991) and reached upper-middle income status by 2000 — a resource-curse exception. Transparency International consistently ranks it the least corrupt country in sub-Saharan Africa. SA faces a comparable governance challenge post-state-capture: rebuilding meritocratic institutions under political pressure is the decisive intervention.
Approach
At independence in 1966, Botswana was one of the world's poorest countries. The BDP government made two foundational choices: it created an independent Minerals Management department staffed by meritocratic civil servants (resisting patronage appointments), and it established the Pula Fund — a sovereign wealth fund — to sterilise diamond revenue windfalls. Recruitment into senior civil service was based on qualifications and competitive examination. Corruption prosecutions followed discovery of state capture attempts.
Timeline: Institutional foundations established within 5–10 years of independence; results visible within 15 years
Lessons for South Africa
SA faces a comparable governance challenge post-state-capture: rebuilding meritocratic institutions under political pressure. Botswana's experience shows that early investment in bureaucratic quality — not just legislation — is decisive. The NPC's National Development Plan calls for a developmental state along these lines, but SA's patronage networks are more entrenched than Botswana's were. The DPSA professionalisation agenda and Public Service Amendment Bill are the SA analogues; the Botswana case suggests they must be backed by credible consequence management.
Anti-Extortion and Construction Mafia Task Force
National Treasury PPP Unit and Infrastructure Financing Reform
Fiscal Consolidation and Debt Stabilisation
SAPS Detective Service Capacity and Case Clearance
NPA Prosecution Capacity and Independence
Eskom Debt Relief Conditions and Restructuring Framework
How to cite
Wilse-Samson, L. (2026). SARS Capacity Expansion and Revenue Recovery. SA Policy Space. NYU Wagner School of Public Policy. Retrieved 11 May 2026, from https://sa-policy-space.vercel.app/ideas/sars-capacity-expansion-and-revenue-recovery?snapshot=2026-05-11
Municipal Fiscal Powers and Functions Amendment Bill: National Treasury briefing on proposed technical amendments & adoption
Finance Standing Committee · Dec 2023
PMG ↗Data as of 2026-05-11 · latest PMG meeting 2026-05-08
VAT Refund Processing Reform: reduce average VAT refund processing time from 21 to 7 working days through automated verification algorithms; implement a ring-fenced VAT Refund Reserve Account
Outstanding tax debt recovery programme: segment the R150 billion debt book by collectability (viable vs. uncollectable); deploy dedicated commercial debt collectors for R50k–R500k segment; write off genuinely uncollectable pre-2015 Secondary Tax on Companies credits
BEPS Pillar Two legislation: introduce the global minimum tax (15%) for SA-based multinationals in the 2026 Taxation Laws Amendment Bill; implement Country-by-Country Reporting (CbCR) matching algorithm to detect base erosion
Annual BRRR performance report to Portfolio Committee on Finance: report on tax base expansion, audit yield, VAT refund turnaround, and outstanding debt recovery against 2024–2028 Strategic Plan targets
2024–2028 Strategic Plan horizon; quick wins (VAT refund reform, LBC staffing) within 12 months; full tax base expansion and BEPS Pillar Two enforcement by 2028
SARS operating budget R7.2 billion (2025/26); additional revenue recovery investment R1.2 billion/year; OECD benchmark: each R1 invested in tax administration returns R6–R10 in additional revenue. MTBPS 2025 cites SARS capacity as the primary fiscal stabilisation mechanism in the absence of new tax rate increases.
Tax Administration Act 28 of 2011 (Section 70 third-party data mandate — regulations update needed for digital platform operators); Income Tax Act amendment for BEPS Pillar Two (15% global minimum tax); Taxation Laws Amendment Act 2025 (annual omnibus bill process). No new primary legislation required for AI audit tools, LBC staffing, or VAT refund process redesign.
SARS institutional recovery has rare genuine multiparty consensus — the Moyane-era collapse was politically damaging across all parties, and the Kieswetter-era recovery is publicly credited across the political spectrum. The PC on Finance BRRRs show strong parliamentary enthusiasm for SARS capacity investment. Resistance comes from the business community on VAT over-verification risks and from multinational corporations on Pillar Two compliance costs — neither has blocking power in the current GNU configuration.
Rwanda Revenue Authority: 60% revenue increase over 5 years through IT investment and third-party data integration, growing the tax-to-GDP ratio from 10% to 17%. Kenya's iTax system (2013) automated returns and cut compliance time 70% while expanding the tax base by 2 million taxpayers in 3 years. Georgia (2004–2012) achieved the fastest improvement in the IMF Tax Administration Diagnostic Assessment Tool (TADAT) history through radical institutional reform directly analogous to SARS's post-Moyane recovery.
Botswana negotiated a 50% equity stake in De Beers' diamond operations (Debswana, 1969) and channelled revenues through the Pula Fund sovereign wealth fund, achieving a fiscal savings rate above 50% of GDP in boom years. GDP per capita growth averaged 9% for 30 years (1966–1996) — the fastest sustained growth in modern history. Key institutional factors: a professional finance ministry, independent auditor general, and parliamentary review of diamond contracts. SA's management of mineral revenues and state-owned enterprise stakes could draw directly on Botswana's governance architecture.