South Africa's Drinks Industry Seeks Tax Relief After New Sales Ban

By Maev Martin
South Africa's Drinks Industry Seeks Tax Relief After New Sales Ban

South Africa's alcohol industry, reeling under a renewed liquor sales ban since end of December, has called for a deferment of excise duty to stave off a wave of business closures and job losses.

President Cyril Ramaphosa extended an existing countrywide ban on alcohol sales on Monday saying it has helped to reduce trauma cases in hospitals and keep staff and facilities available for COVID-19 patients.

He did not give a definitive date on when the ban would be lifted.

'A Grim Picture'

"The South African wine industry faces a grim picture of business closures, job losses, downward price pressure, structural damage to subsectors," Vinpro, which represents 2,500 local wine producers, said in a joint statement issued by several alcohol associations in South Africa.

The government had banned the sale of alcohol for over four months from April but had later deferred 5 billion rand ($325.48 million) in excise taxes for July and August.

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The alcohol industry in South Africa pays on an average of 2.5 billion rand per month in excise tax, the statement said, adding that the ban has left the industry in a "precarious" state.

An Enormous Financial Crisis

'The industry ... faces an enormous financial crisis, and its capacity to make these payments is severely constrained,' said the South African Liquor Brandowners Association, which represents companies such as Distell Group, Diageo Plc, Pernod Ricard among others.

The alcohol ban was introduced in December for the second time in nine months as coronavirus infections spiked in the country.

South Africa, which has more than a third of all coronavirus cases in the continent, reported record-high daily new cases last week, with total cumulative infections having topped 1.2 million and with more than 33,000 deaths.

News by Reuters edited by Donna Ahern, Checkout. Click subscribe to sign up for the Checkout print edition.

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