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Are South Africa's section 23m interest limitation rules sufficiently targeted and effective in combatting base erosion and profit shifting through earnings stripping schemes by associated enterprises?

Earnings stripping is a simple structure whereby one affiliate company resident in a low or no tax jurisdiction advances an intra-group loan to another affiliate member company resident in a high tax jurisdiction so that the latter makes excessive deductible interest payments. The overall effect of...

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Main Author: Gwaambuka, Tatenda
Other Authors: Titus, Afton
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Department of Commercial Law 2023
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access_status_str Open Access
author Gwaambuka, Tatenda
author2 Titus, Afton
author_browse Gwaambuka, Tatenda
Titus, Afton
author_facet Titus, Afton
Gwaambuka, Tatenda
author_sort Gwaambuka, Tatenda
collection Thesis
description Earnings stripping is a simple structure whereby one affiliate company resident in a low or no tax jurisdiction advances an intra-group loan to another affiliate member company resident in a high tax jurisdiction so that the latter makes excessive deductible interest payments. The overall effect of the structure is to move profits from a high tax jurisdiction through the interest payments to a low tax jurisdiction and thus reduce the multinational group's effective tax rate. This study focuses on how such a structure can arise in the South African tax system and if the measures in section 23M are sufficiently targeted and effective to address the problem without affecting legitimate corporate financing decisions. Considering that South Africa is a medium to high tax jurisdiction, the study focuses on those structures in which the borrower is resident in South Africa and the lender is resident in a low or no tax jurisdiction. To achieve these objectives, the study outlines how earnings stripping schemes arise in the South African context, finding that two conditions should simultaneously exist: a deduction/exemption mismatch in South Africa and low or no foreign taxation on interest in the lender's jurisdiction of residence. The study also finds that on an analysis of the normal and withholding tax systems in South Africa, a deduction/exemption mismatch can only arise from the operation of treaty law limits on South African taxing rights. This means problematic, tax motivated earnings stripping schemes which take advantage of the deduction/exemption mismatch arise from treaty abuse. This reformulation of the problem as being treaty-based informs this study's analysis of whether section 23M is sufficiently effective and targeted. The study finds that because of its domestic focus, section 23M is neither sufficiently effective nor specific in addressing earnings stripping schemes. The author, therefore, proposes a radical shift in how South Africa deals with earnings stripping schemes: amending section 23M to account for the foreign tax treatment of interest and reframing the rule as a provisional measure while South Africa focuses its long-term efforts on treaty-based reforms.
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:36:58.860Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2023
publishDateRange 2023
publishDateSort 2023
publisher Department of Commercial Law
publisherStr Department of Commercial Law
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spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/37262 Are South Africa's section 23m interest limitation rules sufficiently targeted and effective in combatting base erosion and profit shifting through earnings stripping schemes by associated enterprises? Gwaambuka, Tatenda Titus, Afton Tax Law Earnings stripping is a simple structure whereby one affiliate company resident in a low or no tax jurisdiction advances an intra-group loan to another affiliate member company resident in a high tax jurisdiction so that the latter makes excessive deductible interest payments. The overall effect of the structure is to move profits from a high tax jurisdiction through the interest payments to a low tax jurisdiction and thus reduce the multinational group's effective tax rate. This study focuses on how such a structure can arise in the South African tax system and if the measures in section 23M are sufficiently targeted and effective to address the problem without affecting legitimate corporate financing decisions. Considering that South Africa is a medium to high tax jurisdiction, the study focuses on those structures in which the borrower is resident in South Africa and the lender is resident in a low or no tax jurisdiction. To achieve these objectives, the study outlines how earnings stripping schemes arise in the South African context, finding that two conditions should simultaneously exist: a deduction/exemption mismatch in South Africa and low or no foreign taxation on interest in the lender's jurisdiction of residence. The study also finds that on an analysis of the normal and withholding tax systems in South Africa, a deduction/exemption mismatch can only arise from the operation of treaty law limits on South African taxing rights. This means problematic, tax motivated earnings stripping schemes which take advantage of the deduction/exemption mismatch arise from treaty abuse. This reformulation of the problem as being treaty-based informs this study's analysis of whether section 23M is sufficiently effective and targeted. The study finds that because of its domestic focus, section 23M is neither sufficiently effective nor specific in addressing earnings stripping schemes. The author, therefore, proposes a radical shift in how South Africa deals with earnings stripping schemes: amending section 23M to account for the foreign tax treatment of interest and reframing the rule as a provisional measure while South Africa focuses its long-term efforts on treaty-based reforms. 2023-03-06T09:28:01Z 2023-03-06T09:28:01Z 2022 2023-02-20T12:52:33Z Master Thesis Masters LLM http://hdl.handle.net/11427/37262 eng application/pdf Department of Commercial Law Faculty of Law
spellingShingle Tax Law
Gwaambuka, Tatenda
Are South Africa's section 23m interest limitation rules sufficiently targeted and effective in combatting base erosion and profit shifting through earnings stripping schemes by associated enterprises?
thesis_degree_str Master's
title Are South Africa's section 23m interest limitation rules sufficiently targeted and effective in combatting base erosion and profit shifting through earnings stripping schemes by associated enterprises?
title_full Are South Africa's section 23m interest limitation rules sufficiently targeted and effective in combatting base erosion and profit shifting through earnings stripping schemes by associated enterprises?
title_fullStr Are South Africa's section 23m interest limitation rules sufficiently targeted and effective in combatting base erosion and profit shifting through earnings stripping schemes by associated enterprises?
title_full_unstemmed Are South Africa's section 23m interest limitation rules sufficiently targeted and effective in combatting base erosion and profit shifting through earnings stripping schemes by associated enterprises?
title_short Are South Africa's section 23m interest limitation rules sufficiently targeted and effective in combatting base erosion and profit shifting through earnings stripping schemes by associated enterprises?
title_sort are south africa s section 23m interest limitation rules sufficiently targeted and effective in combatting base erosion and profit shifting through earnings stripping schemes by associated enterprises
topic Tax Law
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/37262
work_keys_str_mv AT gwaambukatatenda aresouthafricassection23minterestlimitationrulessufficientlytargetedandeffectiveincombattingbaseerosionandprofitshiftingthroughearningsstrippingschemesbyassociatedenterprises