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-SA budget in brief- Manuel says corporate tax competitive
CAPE TOWN - South African Finance Minister Trevor Manuel said yesterday the country's company tax rates were globally competitive after he left the main corporate rate unchanged at 29 per cent in his budget speech on Wednesday.
Many analysts had hoped for further tax relief for companies as the
government aims for six per cent economic growth.
But at a post-budget breakfast briefing, Manuel pointed out that
the corporate rate had been reduced in stages from 48 per cent over
a decade ago to 29 per cent last year.
Manuel said this was effectively a tax on dividends and the
overall tax burden on South African companies was still
competitive.
Rand, bonds steady after budget JOHANNESBURG - South African
government bonds steadied yesterday after sharp gains in the
previous session while the rand also remained little moved and was
seen range-bound ahead of US data later in the day.
The yield on the most-traded R153 bond due 2010 was 1,5 basis
points lower at 7,075 per cent after firming to a record peak on
Wednesday as the government announced a cut in pension tax in its
2006/7 budget and reduced deficit forecasts for the next two
years.
The rand was trading around 6,0915/US$, slightly softer on its
previous New York close.
Finance Minister Trevor Manuel's budget speech offered little to
excite the rand but some traders said predictions for the same
buoyant economic growth of the past few years might have cemented
the optimism that has helped lift the rand since late last
year.
-Nampa-Reuters
But at a post-budget breakfast briefing, Manuel pointed out that
the corporate rate had been reduced in stages from 48 per cent over
a decade ago to 29 per cent last year.Manuel said this was
effectively a tax on dividends and the overall tax burden on South
African companies was still competitive.Rand, bonds steady after
budget JOHANNESBURG - South African government bonds steadied
yesterday after sharp gains in the previous session while the rand
also remained little moved and was seen range-bound ahead of US
data later in the day.The yield on the most-traded R153 bond due
2010 was 1,5 basis points lower at 7,075 per cent after firming to
a record peak on Wednesday as the government announced a cut in
pension tax in its 2006/7 budget and reduced deficit forecasts for
the next two years.The rand was trading around 6,0915/US$, slightly
softer on its previous New York close.Finance Minister Trevor
Manuel's budget speech offered little to excite the rand but some
traders said predictions for the same buoyant economic growth of
the past few years might have cemented the optimism that has helped
lift the rand since late last year.-Nampa-Reuters
