S.Africa: Proposed Changes to Secondary TP Adjustment

Table of Contents

Proposed Changes to Secondary Transfer Pricing Adjustment
South Africa’s National Treasury and the South African Revenue Service (SARS) recently released the draft Taxation Laws Amendment Bill 2014 (Bill). One of the key proposals in the Bill is to change the secondary transfer pricing adjustment mechanism from a deemed loan to a deemed dividend.
Transfer pricing is a concern because, where for example a local party undercharges a foreign connected party for goods or services, or where the foreign connected party overcharges the local party, the parties to the transaction can effectively manipulate their income and taxable profits can be shifted from South Africa to other jurisdictions.
Section 31 of the Income Tax Act, No 58 of 1962 (Act) contains South Africa’s transfer pricing rules. Essentially, where connected persons enter into international transactions on terms that are not arm’s length, s31 of the Act allows SARS to disregard any such manipulations and tax the parties as if they were transacting on an arm’s length basis. This is referred to as the primary adjustment mechanism.
Section 31 of the Act also provides for a secondary adjustment mechanism. Where for example a local party has undercharged a connected foreign party, or the foreign party has overcharged the local party, the actual amounts paid are not affected despite the primary adjustment.
In order to get parties to actually pay arm’s length amounts, the difference in pricing is deemed to be a loan outstanding between the parties, on which arm’s length interest accrues, which interest is taxable.
In the explanatory memorandum to the Bill, SARS states that the deemed loan mechanism is problematic because in practice it is simply never repaid. The reason for this is that:
• there are no contracts setting out the repayment terms because it is a deemed loan and not an actual loan; and
• there may be exchange control restrictions that prevent the repayment of a deemed loan.
It is proposed in the Bill that the relevant amount not be deemed to be a loan, but rather a dividend in specie paid by the local party, on which dividends tax would, in principle, be payable. The effective date would be January 1, 2015.
At a recent workshop hosted by National Treasury and SARS on the Bill, stakeholders voiced various concerns in respect of this proposal. Some of the comments included that:

• the Bill does not take into account situations where the relationship between the parties is that of shareholder and subsidiary and the provision deems an amount to be a dividend paid by the shareholder to its subsidiary — in such circumstances the participation exemption in a relevant tax treaty might not be available;
• the Bill does not take into account the situation where the local party is a natural person, which cannot as such pay a dividend;
• the Bill does not say when the dividend is deemed to arise;
• the Bill does not say to whom the dividend is deemed to be paid; and
• it is not clear how current deemed loans will be affected and whether the Bill will have retrospective effect.
National Treasury and SARS initially appeared adamant to proceed with the proposed amendment in its current form, but eventually did take note of the concerns raised and indicated that further consultation will be held in respect of this matter.
Shopping Cart
Scroll to Top

Compare Programmes

Choose the track that fits your practice focus. All programmes are practitioner-taught, cohort-based, and validated by Middlesex University.

Dimension Transfer Pricing International Taxation South African Tax Law
Jurisdictional audience Global audience, covers all jurisdictions Global audience, covers all jurisdictions South Africa specific, relevant to SADC region
Ideal for TP managers, advisors, in-house tax teams, analysts moving into TP Advisors and managers dealing with cross-border rules, treaties, planning Practitioners working with the SA Income Tax Act, cases, compliance
Core focus Methods, comparables, DEMPE, documentation, audits, dispute defence Treaties, source vs residence, anti-avoidance, PE, relief from double tax Statutory interpretation, case law, assessments, objections, local practice
Primary tools OECD TP Guidelines, UN Manual, BEPS Actions 8–10, 13, case law OECD and UN Models, MLI, BEPS 1.0 and 2.0, domestic rules, cases Income Tax Act, SARS practice notes, Tax Administration Act, SA cases
Assessment style Case-based assignments, file reviews, short written defences Problem questions, treaty interpretation, position papers Problem questions, statutory analysis, case commentary
Typical outcomes Build defensible TP files and strategies, improve audit readiness Design cross-border structures within rules, mitigate double tax Apply SA tax law accurately, manage reviews and disputes
Entry point Start with PG Certificate, progress to PG Diploma, then MSc, or enter later with suitable experience or credits.

Awards Ladder

Award Best for What you achieve Assessment highlights
PG Certificate Foundation to intermediate upskilling Core concepts, frameworks, and applied techniques Short case write ups, timed responses, applied tasks
PG Diploma Expanding technical depth and application Advanced analysis, risk management, documentation quality Integrated case assignments, policy memos, oral defence
MSc Leaders and specialists building authority Capstone project and research backed practice outcomes Research project, viva or presentation, publishable summary

IFF Certificate Courses

Practical, practitioner-led certificates designed for immediate on-the-job application. Each course can stand alone or act as a pathway into our postgraduate tracks.

Dimension Conducting a Transfer Pricing Trial Effectively Managing Tax Teams Indirect Taxation Tax Risk Management
Jurisdictional audience Global audience Global audience Global audience, with local adaptation Global audience
Ideal for In-house tax, TP managers, litigators, advisors preparing for audits, ADR, trial Heads of tax, managers, team leads, controllers, emerging leaders VAT, GST, customs, finance managers, AP, AR, compliance specialists Tax managers, risk officers, controllers, advisors building governance
Core focus Case theory, evidence files, expert reports, witness prep, courtroom strategy Operating models, KPIs, workflows, stakeholder management, coaching VAT design, place of supply, input credits, exemptions, WHT interactions Risk identification, controls, documentation, audit readiness, dispute playbooks
Delivery mode Online, live sessions plus guided self-study Online, live sessions plus guided self-study Online, live sessions plus guided self-study Online, live sessions plus guided self-study
Duration 16 weeks, part-time 16 weeks, part-time 16 weeks, part-time 16 weeks, part-time
Outcomes Confident litigation preparation and defence for TP disputes Stronger execution, clear roles, measurable team performance Reduced VAT errors, better cash flow, fewer surprises at audit Structured governance, fewer findings, faster dispute resolution
Prerequisites TP fundamentals recommended Supervisory experience helpful Basic VAT knowledge helpful General tax experience helpful
Pathway Progress to PG Certificate in Transfer Pricing Progress to Mechanics of Leading Tax Teams, PG Certificate (leadership) Progress to PG programmes, International Tax or SA Tax Law Progress to PG Certificate in International Taxation or Transfer Pricing
Assessment End of module progress assessment

5000-word assignment if PG-Cert option elected
End of module progress assessment

5000-word assignment if PG-Cert option elected
End of module progress assessment

5000-word assignment if PG-Cert option elected
End of module progress assessment

5000-word assignment if PG-Cert option elected