National News

FIFA's great SA rip-off

2010-06-07 12:19
Email | Print

Johannesburg - For the next five weeks get used to Sepp Blatter being your president and Jacob Zuma sitting on the bench as a bit-player whose government is legally bound to perform the international football federation’s every bidding.

WIN: World Cup Havaianas

FIFA's grip on South Africa was cemented with 17 key guarantees the government had to agree to in order to host the world’s biggest sporting event.

A senior government official said: “FIFA are a bunch of thugs. Not even the UN expects you to sign away your tax base. These mafiosos do.”

Tax bubble

The South African Revenue Service (Sars) has been forced to accede to an extraordinary “tax ­bubble” around “FIFA-designated sites” which exempts FIFA, its subsidiaries and foreign football associations from paying income tax, customs duties and value-added tax (VAT).

As a consequence South Africa, which has already spent R63bn, will stand to lose tens or possibly hundreds of millions of rand in potential revenue.

According to a document compiled by Sars, by the end of April, R613m worth of goods had been imported into South Africa for the tournament. Rebates of R118m were paid out on those imports in line with special tax measures for the World Cup.

The National Treasury says it is unable to provide estimates of the amount of foreign currency brought into and taken out of SA, but said one of the guarantees was “unrestricted import and export”.

Some of FIFA’s commercial affiliates, licensees, host broadcasters, broadcast rights agencies, merchandise partners and service providers will not pay taxes on the profits they make during the World Cup. But VAT will be paid on ticket sales and foreign-based soccer players will be taxed on income they receive for playing in the tournament.

Hospital beds, intensive care units and ambulances have been reserved for FIFA and its foreign visitors.

More than R700m has been spent readying emergency medical services and numerous state-of-the-art medical centres, ambulances and rescue vehicles which have been kept under lock and key for exclusive use during the 30-day tournament.

FIFA income up 50%

Safa has also had to provide FIFA with two private jets, two limousines, 300 cars, half a dozen buses and “chauffeurs who speak fluent English and are thoroughly familiar with the area”.

FIFA has hit paydirt. The money is rolling into its Swiss bank accounts and FIFA secretary-general Jerome Valcke boasted last week that “we have increased our income by 50% since 2006 in Germany to 2010 in South Africa”.

FIFA - a registered “not-for-profit” organisation - has banked a record R25bn in media and marketing revenues. In March, the Swiss parliament upheld FIFA's tax-free status in Switzerland.

The World Cup is expected to contribute an additional 0.5% to the country’s gross domestic product.

But Dr Udesh Pillay, the executive director of the Human Sciences Research Council’s Centre for Service Delivery, was recently quoted as saying that the country’s expenditure on the World Cup accounts for 6.4% of the 2010/11 GDP.

Not a revenue-raising exercise

Sars spokesperson Adrian Lackay said: “From the perspective of what we spent as a country and from what the country stands to make in terms of revenue and profits it is almost negligible.

“Our approach to the World Cup has been that it was never going to be a revenue-raising exercise.

“Certainly it would be wrong to view the World Cup as a significant contributor in itself.

“The concessions we had to give to FIFA are simply too demanding and overwhelming for us to have material monetary benefits.”

- Reporting by Julian Rademeyer, Chandre Prince and Anna-Maria Lombard

Read more on:    fifa  |  sars  |  sepp blatter

 

Comment on this story
53 comments
Add your comment
Comment 0 characters remaining
Live Video Streaming
Video Highlights
Sport Talk
  • A Tshwane derby in Soweto
    This week is all about the cup final – the Nedbank Cup final to be exact.
  •  Updated: Hottest SWC WAGs

    Updated: Hottest SWC 2010 WAGs

    Logs
    P W PTS
    P W PTS
    P W PTS
    P W PTS
    P W PTS
    P W PTS
    P W PTS
    P W PTS
    Previous Results

    Date Home Team Result Away Team
    Vote

    World Cup 2010 is over and the country is returning to normal - but have you moved on yet?

    Twitter Follow Sport24 on Twitter

    Newsletters Sign up for Sport24's Morning Glory newsletter

    Blogs Yes your opinion counts. Get it out there

    WIN Enter and win with Sport24!

    Mobile Sport24 on your mobile phone - WAP, alerts, downloads, services

    BlackBerry Stay in the loop on your BlackBerry

    iPhone Latest Sport24 news on your iPhone

    Facebook "Like" Sport24's Facebook page

    TV schedule Plan your couch time with our searchable sport TV guide

    RSS Feeds Sport news delivered really simply.

     
    There are new stories on the homepage. Click here to see them.