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ARTÍCULO
TITULO

Merchant cash advances: investigating the taxation consequences in South Africa

Eduard Kilian    
Rudie Nel    

Resumen

AbstractThe merchant cash advance is an emerging lending product designed to address the need to maintain cash flows and is essentially the business equivalent of a ?payday? loan. A lump-sum advance is made by the merchant cash advance service provider to a business (the merchant) in exchange for an agreed upon percentage of future credit and/or debit card receivables. This article investigates the taxation consequences of merchant cash advance transactions in South Africa, in an attempt to provide guidance which is currently lacking. Although it is posited that a merchant cash advance is a form of debt factoring, the income tax treatment of the initial advance and the resulting discount reflect that of a loan. Through the investigation it was determined that merchants will be able to deduct the discount and processing fees from income. The merchant cash advance service provider will include such discount and processing fee in ?gross income?. The initial advance and any resulting discount are held to be a ?financial service? and therefore an exempt supply for VAT purposes, with the processing fee constituting a taxable supply.

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