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Employees need at least 5% salary increase to maintain spending power
The Mercury
|March 25, 2025
CONSUMERS are in for a tough time. They face the combined impact of a VAT increase, income tax bracket creep, and the absence of a strong, growth-stimulating fiscal spend in the recent Budget Speech. Some argue, however, that these pressures could have been eased by a reduction in the interest rate - a move that might also have helped revive the sluggish property market.
It is getting harder, say the experts, for the average South African to keep up with costs.
In fact, says Tanya Tosen, a tax and remuneration specialist at Tax Consulting South Africa, employees need a salary increase of at least 5% just to maintain their current spending power.
She said this is because Finance Minister Enoch Godongwana has not adjusted personal income tax brackets for inflation in the 2025/26 tax year.
Therefore if employees receive increases, they may be pushed into higher tax brackets without realising it, leading to more tax deductions and less money in their pockets.
During a recent webinar hosted by CPD Consortium, Tosen broke down what this means for different salary brackets.
She said that for high earners, where someone earning R2 million receives a 5.5% increase, they could end up with nearly R7000 less in their take-home pay because of the higher tax bracket. They would actually need a 6.13% increase just to break even.
For middle earners, a person earning R30 000 per month, would see their marginal tax rate jump from 26% to 31% if they received a 4.3% salary increase. Tosen said that without tax bracket adjustments, their PAYE (Pay As You Earn) tax would increase by nearly R4200 per year, leaving them with less disposable income.
This story is from the March 25, 2025 edition of The Mercury.
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