Despite major changes in
the new customs legislation,
customs processes will
largely remain unchanged,
according to Shepstone &
Wylie partner Freek van
Rooyen who addressed
the Western Cape
Exporters’ Club
last week on the
topic.
“The
terminology is
changing and
that will take
some getting
used to while
the penalty
amounts have increased
and timelines have
changed,” he said. “When
this new legislation and the
proposed changes came to
the fore, we all looked at the
draft legislation and there
were numerous
sections to it
– in excess of
900 – and we
questioned
whether we
were going to
survive. But
if we look at it
closely then it is
really not
all that much different. Life
is going to be more or less
the same.”
He said from concerns
over timelines being too
short to the impact on City
Deep with cargo clearing
at the first port of entry,
the two new bills would not
have the dramatic impact
that was first expected.
“The only
issue or
concern that
we can really
see lies in the
new penalty
regime and
the impact
that will
have on the
players in
international
trade.”
He said
with the
current
legislation having been
enacted in 1964 there was
a need for new customs
bills.
“Our current legislation
is also a very difficult
piece of legislation to
read and make sense of.
It had to be recreated
to bring it into line
with modernisation
and to give effect to
the numerous binding
international agreements
and conventions that South
Africa is now part of.”
Van Rooyen said the
rewriting of the laws had
been a mammoth task – a
process that started in
2003.
Comparing the new
legislation
to the
existing act,
he assured
exporters
concerned
about the
impact that
it would be
business as
usual when
the new
legislation
became
effective.
He said
from ongoing interactions
with the South African
Revenue Service (Sars) the
government was cognisant
of the fears around the
new acts and the phased
approach would benefit
industry, allowing for
adjustments and little or no
disruption to trade.
INSERT
The only issue lies
in the new penalty
regime and the
impact that will have
on the players in
international trade.
– Freek van Rooyen
New customs legislation not the behemoth originally envisaged
24 Feb 2017 - by Liesl Venter
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FTW - 24 Feb 2017

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