South Africa: South Africa appoints new Commissioner

International Tax Review is part of Legal Benchmarking Limited, 1-2 Paris Garden, London, SE1 8ND

Copyright © Legal Benchmarking Limited and its affiliated companies 2025

Accessibility | Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | Modern Slavery Statement

South Africa: South Africa appoints new Commissioner

Sponsored by

sponsored-firms-ww.png
Edward Kieswetter SARS

The appointment of Edward Kieswetter as the new Commissioner for the South African Revenue Service (SARS) was announced at the end of March 2019.

Kieswetter, who has significant experience in both the private and public sectors, including a previous stint at SARS where he served as deputy commissioner, started in his new role at the beginning of May.

Kieswetter's predecessor, Tom Moyane, was suspended and then dismissed in November 2018 following an independent commission of enquiry that found that he was unfit to hold office. In the period between Moyane's suspension and Kieswetter taking office, the reins at SARS were held by Mark Kingon, who served as acting commissioner. Kingon is a long standing senior SARS executive who has an excellent track record within SARS and is highly respected by taxpayers.

Kieswetter is taking on a challenging role. Under Moyane's leadership, many SARS senior personnel either chose to resign or were sidelined, and structures that had been put in place and proven effective for SARS collections, ultimately encouraging taxpayer compliance, were ignored or dismantled. These and other factors resulted in SARS becoming highly destablised and caused enormous damage to its credibility. From a financial perspective, SARS failed to meet its annual collection targets by a significant margin for several years in a row.

Kieswetter has committed to rebuilding the trust and pride of SARS' personnel in their own organisation, as well as taking steps to restore the confidence and respect of taxpayers. He has also acknowledged the importance of addressing the loss of skills and efficiencies that occurred at SARS over the past few years.

While these intentions are applauded, concerns remain that the damage to SARS over the past few years has been so great that repairing it will be a highly complex and lengthy process.

more across site & shared bottom lb ros

More from across our site

A lack of commitment from major jurisdictions and the associated compliance burden are obstacles facing the OECD initiative
Richard Gregg is no longer fit and proper to be a tax agent, said the TPB; in other news, MHA completed its acquisition of Baker Tilly South-East Europe
Recent Indian case law emphasises the importance of economic substance over mere legal form in evaluating tax implications, say authors from Khaitan & Co
PepsiCo was represented by PwC, while the ATO was advised by MinterEllison, an Australian-headquartered law firm
Three tax experts dissect the impact of a 30% tariff that has shaken up trade relations between South Africa and the US
Awards
ITR is delighted to reveal all the shortlisted nominees for the 2025 Americas Tax Awards
As we move into an era of ‘substance over form’, determining the fundamental nature of a particular instrument is key when evaluating the tax implications of selling hybrid securities
It stands in stark contrast to a mere 1% increase in firmwide revenue since last year
It follows a court case concerning a Freedom of Information request lodged by the founder of a software company
After years of deafening silence, the UK tax authority is taking overdue action against corporates that fail to prevent the facilitation of tax evasion
Gift this article