Original Research

A panoptic view of the South African wealth tax

Asheer Jaywant Ram
South African Journal of Economic and Management Sciences | Vol 28, No 1 | a5857 | DOI: https://doi.org/10.4102/sajems.v28i1.5857 | © 2025 Asheer Jaywant Ram | This work is licensed under CC Attribution 4.0
Submitted: 16 August 2024 | Published: 15 January 2025

About the author(s)

Asheer Jaywant Ram, Margo Steele School of Accountancy, Faculty of Commerce, Law and Management, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, South Africa

Abstract

Background: Wealth taxes are a topic of intense debate, with most countries having either abolished them or considered, but not implemented such measures. The South African government is contemplating the introduction of a wealth tax, purportedly to enhance revenue collection.

Aim: This article examines whether the proposed South African wealth tax functions as a government panopticon, offering an alternative explanation for its introduction. It also considers the government’s transparency regarding the potential wealth tax.

Setting: This article examined the opinions of tax experts in South Africa.

Method: An interpretive approach is adopted. The traits of the wealth tax and the themes of the panopticon are identified and used as the row and column headings in a correspondence table, which serves as the research instrument distributed to tax experts. The tax experts indicate any associations between the themes of the panopticon and the traits of the wealth tax. Forty aggregated responses are subjected to correspondence analysis.

Results: The potential wealth tax functions as a panopticon. It identifies and reveals relevant tax information about high-wealth individuals, appearing to coerce their compliance.

Conclusion: There is credence to the alternate rationale for introducing a wealth tax in South Africa.

Contribution: This is one of the first articles to apply the panopticon, a novel theoretical framework, in a tax context in South Africa. The findings are relevant to the exploration of similar taxes in other jurisdictions and provide a means for the critical evaluation of the motives behind tax policy decisions made by governments.


Keywords

Bentham; correspondence analysis; Foucault; panopticon; South Africa; wealth tax

JEL Codes

H20: General; H24: Personal Income and Other Nonbusiness Taxes and Subsidies; H27: Other Sources of Revenue

Sustainable Development Goal

Goal 16: Peace, justice and strong institutions

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