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SARS aims for R50 billion as it hires 1,700 debt collectors

SARS aims for R50 billion as it hires 1,700 debt collectors

IOL News24-05-2025

Sars Commissioner Edward Kieswetter also said their commitment was that they expected to yield at least R20 billion from the Debt Recovery Project.
Image: Screenshot: Newzroom Afrika
The South African Revenue Service (SARS) is set to bolster its debt collection capabilities significantly, announcing plans to hire 1,700 debt collectors in the 2025/26 financial year.
This strategy is part of a concerted effort to improve revenue collection and recover debts in light of ongoing fiscal challenges.
Commissioner Edward Kieswetter announced this while addressing the joint committees of finance and appropriations on Friday.
'We have already employed 500, used the month of April and early May to train them, to induct them, to get them going, and they will now start collecting debt. In addition to that, next week, June 1, we will bring in a further 250 and continue to ramp that up,' he said.
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Kieswetter also said their commitment was that they expected to yield at least R20 billion from that Debt Recovery Project.
'But our aspiration is to go much closer to R50 billion as far as that is concerned. So you should see next year a significant step up ahead of inflation, just on the debt recovery.'
In his Budget, Finance Minister Enoch Godongwana allocated R7.5 billion to the SARS over the next three years to increase the effectiveness in collecting more revenue.
National Treasury's Budget documents said the funding will focus on using technology, data science, and artificial intelligence to improve efficiency and transparency in tax administration.
Kieswetter said the current revenue projection did not include the current projection of revenue that will be derived from the Focus Debt Recovery Project.
'The minister has indicated that over the next six months, as he builds confidence, it will provide him the opportunity to consider how much of that he would like to include, both in the in-year but also out-of-year budgets.'
He told the MPs that the Debt Recovery Project had a ring-fenced allocation in the previous financial year to focus on revenue recovery.
'Some of that we applied very specifically to debt recovery, spent just over R300 million in the last financial year, and we were able to employ just short of about 760 additional employees on a project basis, train them up, and get them to use our systems.'
He said the cohort of debt collectors hired last year delivered just short of R25 billion that was included in the revenue outcomes of last year.
SARS's final unaudited revenue outcome for 2024/25 stood at R1.86 trillion.
Kieswetter said the first year of the debt recovery project has confirmed their view that revenue administration was integral to the fiscal integrity of South Africa and should not be taken for granted.
Commenting on the modernisation of SARS, he said it was integral to the quality, the efficiency, and the effectiveness of their compliance programme.
'A significant amount of that is the work that SARS performs through auditors, investigators, and debt collectors to follow up not only service-related issues, but also non-compliance-related issues. Cumulatively, that work yields additional revenue, which, if not done, will not be collected.'

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