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Exploring challenges with transfer pricing in South Africa: impact on government spent and income

Transfer pricing is a challenge for tax collection as taxpayers in multinational corporations may shift profits from affiliates in high-tax jurisdiction to their lower-tax jurisdiction counterparts (for tax avoidance), leading to reduced tax collected and therefore the country's financial muscle wea...

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Main Author: Mashamaite, Mmapula
Other Authors: Alhassan, Abdul Latif
Format: Thesis
Language:English
English
Published: Graduate School of Business (GSB) 2025
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access_status_str Open Access
author Mashamaite, Mmapula
author2 Alhassan, Abdul Latif
author_browse Alhassan, Abdul Latif
Mashamaite, Mmapula
author_facet Alhassan, Abdul Latif
Mashamaite, Mmapula
author_sort Mashamaite, Mmapula
collection Thesis
description Transfer pricing is a challenge for tax collection as taxpayers in multinational corporations may shift profits from affiliates in high-tax jurisdiction to their lower-tax jurisdiction counterparts (for tax avoidance), leading to reduced tax collected and therefore the country's financial muscle weakened. Transfer pricing practices have been found, to be responsive to opportunities for avoiding payment of public taxes, as a result this research explored the challenges that the South African government faces relating to transfer pricing transactions. The research undertook in-depth interviews with seven taxation professionals and analysed the data usingqualitative thematic analysis. The thematic analysis revealed several critical themes for each of the three research objectives. Firstly, for the objective of examining the main transfer pricing challenges in South Africa, the complexity of transfer pricing rules, prolonged transfer pricing audit processes, multinational enterprises (MNEs) obedience to transfer pricing rules, and skills shortages were revealed as the key themes. Advanced South African Revenue Services (SARS) reporting systems, advance pricing agreements enforcement, assistance by development finance institutions, improved technological resource capabilities, and capacity and resource improvements were revealed as key themes for the objective of exploring the initiatives employed by South Africa to address the transfer pricing challenges. Lastly, in understanding the key challenges experienced by SARS in collecting tax revenues from transfer pricing transactions, it was revealed that access to relevant MNE information, the complexity of transfer pricing transactions, inadequate transfer pricing transaction tax reporting, disputes raised by MNE's on transfer pricing assessment outcomes, and skills shortages were the main themes. The data presented in this paper is in more ways affirmative, as the trajectory from both tax professionals with knowledge and experience within SARS and those with both SARS and MNE knowledge has been sourced. This paper documents the key challenges that South Africa and its revenue authority, SARS, face concerning taxes on arm's length transactions. The paper further indicates initiatives that should be considered to address these challenges; however, there is still a need for a clearer understanding of the skills requirements for effective management of the taxes from arm's length transactions.
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language English
eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:33:08.525Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2025
publishDateRange 2025
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publisher Graduate School of Business (GSB)
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spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/41744 Exploring challenges with transfer pricing in South Africa: impact on government spent and income Mashamaite, Mmapula Alhassan, Abdul Latif Tax, SARS Transfer pricing is a challenge for tax collection as taxpayers in multinational corporations may shift profits from affiliates in high-tax jurisdiction to their lower-tax jurisdiction counterparts (for tax avoidance), leading to reduced tax collected and therefore the country's financial muscle weakened. Transfer pricing practices have been found, to be responsive to opportunities for avoiding payment of public taxes, as a result this research explored the challenges that the South African government faces relating to transfer pricing transactions. The research undertook in-depth interviews with seven taxation professionals and analysed the data usingqualitative thematic analysis. The thematic analysis revealed several critical themes for each of the three research objectives. Firstly, for the objective of examining the main transfer pricing challenges in South Africa, the complexity of transfer pricing rules, prolonged transfer pricing audit processes, multinational enterprises (MNEs) obedience to transfer pricing rules, and skills shortages were revealed as the key themes. Advanced South African Revenue Services (SARS) reporting systems, advance pricing agreements enforcement, assistance by development finance institutions, improved technological resource capabilities, and capacity and resource improvements were revealed as key themes for the objective of exploring the initiatives employed by South Africa to address the transfer pricing challenges. Lastly, in understanding the key challenges experienced by SARS in collecting tax revenues from transfer pricing transactions, it was revealed that access to relevant MNE information, the complexity of transfer pricing transactions, inadequate transfer pricing transaction tax reporting, disputes raised by MNE's on transfer pricing assessment outcomes, and skills shortages were the main themes. The data presented in this paper is in more ways affirmative, as the trajectory from both tax professionals with knowledge and experience within SARS and those with both SARS and MNE knowledge has been sourced. This paper documents the key challenges that South Africa and its revenue authority, SARS, face concerning taxes on arm's length transactions. The paper further indicates initiatives that should be considered to address these challenges; however, there is still a need for a clearer understanding of the skills requirements for effective management of the taxes from arm's length transactions. 2025-09-10T10:46:37Z 2025-09-10T10:46:37Z 2025 2025-09-10T08:56:11Z Thesis / Dissertation Masters Masters http://hdl.handle.net/11427/41744 en eng application/pdf Graduate School of Business (GSB) Faculty of Commerce University of Cape Town
spellingShingle Tax, SARS
Mashamaite, Mmapula
Exploring challenges with transfer pricing in South Africa: impact on government spent and income
thesis_degree_str Master's
title Exploring challenges with transfer pricing in South Africa: impact on government spent and income
title_full Exploring challenges with transfer pricing in South Africa: impact on government spent and income
title_fullStr Exploring challenges with transfer pricing in South Africa: impact on government spent and income
title_full_unstemmed Exploring challenges with transfer pricing in South Africa: impact on government spent and income
title_short Exploring challenges with transfer pricing in South Africa: impact on government spent and income
title_sort exploring challenges with transfer pricing in south africa impact on government spent and income
topic Tax, SARS
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/41744
work_keys_str_mv AT mashamaitemmapula exploringchallengeswithtransferpricinginsouthafricaimpactongovernmentspentandincome