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Tax consequences of the 2010 FIFA World Cup

With all the excitement in South Africa about the 2010 FIFA World Cup kicking off on 11 June 2010, tax relief will be granted on import tax and VAT, amongst others, in terms of the Revenue Laws Amendment Act 20 of 2006 (hereafter referred to as RLAA). FIFA (Federation Internationale de Football Asso...

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Main Author: Olckers, Teresa
Other Authors: Cramer, Peter
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Department of Commercial Law 2015
Subjects:
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access_status_str Open Access
author Olckers, Teresa
author2 Cramer, Peter
author_browse Cramer, Peter
Olckers, Teresa
author_facet Cramer, Peter
Olckers, Teresa
author_sort Olckers, Teresa
collection Thesis
description With all the excitement in South Africa about the 2010 FIFA World Cup kicking off on 11 June 2010, tax relief will be granted on import tax and VAT, amongst others, in terms of the Revenue Laws Amendment Act 20 of 2006 (hereafter referred to as RLAA). FIFA (Federation Internationale de Football Association), confirmed that SAFA may have the right to serve as a host for the 2010 FIFA World Cup, but in order to qualify 17 guarantees were to be given by South African government to FIFA which is a general requirement for all host cities. These guarantees will be provided by various government departments focusing on the financial environment, safety and security, intellectual property and marketing rights, transport and telecommunications as well as custom duties, other taxes and duties and levies by the Minister of Finance. The government of The Republic of South Africa issued several guarantees that they would comply with to meet certain requirements set out by FIFA for World Cup hosts (Wilson, 2008:1). These include, inter alia, the provision of taxation relief for qualifying individuals and entities. Trevor Manuel, former Minister of Finance, included certain provisions in the RLAA, to give effect to FIFA’s requirements. The RLAA created a tax-free bubble around the FIFA-designated sites so that profits on consumable and semi-durable goods sold within these areas will not be subject to Income tax; nor will VAT be levied. Tax relief will be given on specific goods and services for qualifying taxpayers, as defined in the Income Tax Act 58/1962 ("The Income Tax Act"), (Wilson, 2008:1). This relief system will be governed by an accompanying abuse paragraph in the legislation in order to limit any loss that may be suffered by the South African Revenue Service ("SARS"). The positive and negative impacts, which will arise from hosting such an international event, are important to discuss and consider.
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license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2015
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spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/13508 Tax consequences of the 2010 FIFA World Cup Olckers, Teresa Cramer, Peter Taxation With all the excitement in South Africa about the 2010 FIFA World Cup kicking off on 11 June 2010, tax relief will be granted on import tax and VAT, amongst others, in terms of the Revenue Laws Amendment Act 20 of 2006 (hereafter referred to as RLAA). FIFA (Federation Internationale de Football Association), confirmed that SAFA may have the right to serve as a host for the 2010 FIFA World Cup, but in order to qualify 17 guarantees were to be given by South African government to FIFA which is a general requirement for all host cities. These guarantees will be provided by various government departments focusing on the financial environment, safety and security, intellectual property and marketing rights, transport and telecommunications as well as custom duties, other taxes and duties and levies by the Minister of Finance. The government of The Republic of South Africa issued several guarantees that they would comply with to meet certain requirements set out by FIFA for World Cup hosts (Wilson, 2008:1). These include, inter alia, the provision of taxation relief for qualifying individuals and entities. Trevor Manuel, former Minister of Finance, included certain provisions in the RLAA, to give effect to FIFA’s requirements. The RLAA created a tax-free bubble around the FIFA-designated sites so that profits on consumable and semi-durable goods sold within these areas will not be subject to Income tax; nor will VAT be levied. Tax relief will be given on specific goods and services for qualifying taxpayers, as defined in the Income Tax Act 58/1962 ("The Income Tax Act"), (Wilson, 2008:1). This relief system will be governed by an accompanying abuse paragraph in the legislation in order to limit any loss that may be suffered by the South African Revenue Service ("SARS"). The positive and negative impacts, which will arise from hosting such an international event, are important to discuss and consider. 2015-07-14T09:00:12Z 2015-07-14T09:00:12Z 2011 Master Thesis Masters MCom http://hdl.handle.net/11427/13508 eng application/pdf Department of Commercial Law Faculty of Law University of Cape Town
spellingShingle Taxation
Olckers, Teresa
Tax consequences of the 2010 FIFA World Cup
thesis_degree_str Master's
title Tax consequences of the 2010 FIFA World Cup
title_full Tax consequences of the 2010 FIFA World Cup
title_fullStr Tax consequences of the 2010 FIFA World Cup
title_full_unstemmed Tax consequences of the 2010 FIFA World Cup
title_short Tax consequences of the 2010 FIFA World Cup
title_sort tax consequences of the 2010 fifa world cup
topic Taxation
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/13508
work_keys_str_mv AT olckersteresa taxconsequencesofthe2010fifaworldcup