INSIDE YOUR POCKET: Take-home pay positive, but storm clouds gathering for tax payers

Loading player...
GUEST - Shergeran Naidoo, BankservAfrica’s head of stakeholder engagements.



Take-home pay showed a year-on-year increase, continuing its upward movement in January as the high rate of inflation moderated, providing relief to salary earners. However, stormy clouds are on the horizon, particularly for tax-paying South Africans.



According to the BankservAfrica Take-home Pay Index (BTPI), the nominal average take-home pay was R15 670 in January, representing a 9.1% year-on-year increase although it was off a low base and showed a 1.5% growth on the R15 533 recorded in December, says Shergeran Naidoo, BankservAfrica’s head of stakeholder engagements.



Real take-home pay, the amount you receive after tax, insurance and other deductions, was also higher at R13 968 in January, a 3.5% year-on-year improvement, suggesting the significant erosion of the purchasing power of salary earners during 2023 is easing off.
29 Feb 2024 3PM English South Africa Business News · Investing

Other recent episodes

BofA Slashes SA Growth Forecast as Inflation Surges

Bank of America has cut South Africa’s 2026 GDP growth forecast to 1.3%, warning that higher oil and fertilizer prices will keep inflation above 4% for most of the year. Economist Tatonga Rusike explains
23 Apr 3PM 11 min

Understanding SA’s First Wealth Score

Franc unveils South Africa’s first-ever Wealth Score, revealing that financial habits—not income—are the strongest predictor of financial health. We unpack why SA’s national score is 45/100 and the behavior gap between knowing and doing with Dr. Thomas Brennan, founder and CEO of Franc.
23 Apr 3PM 13 min

Clicks Lifts HEPS 8% Despite Warehouse Disruptions.

Clicks delivered firm interim results with diluted HEPS up 8.1%, even as warehouse system delays cost an estimated R175 million in lost sales. CEO Bertina Engelbrecht discusses pharmacy growth, trading margins, and festive‑season competition.
23 Apr 2PM 16 min