Value-Added Tax Change Implementation Aftermath: A Case of MTN

Phindile R. Nene
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Abstract

The main objective of this article is to explore and describe the impact of the Value-added tax (VAT) increase on Mobile Telephone Networks (MTN) performance by exploring the end-to-end telecommunication (telco) business process. For the nature of this research, there is limited research in both South African and international scholarship that seeks to explore an understanding of the full end-to-end telco industry where study would look at the complexity of telco strategies right from the product catalogue down to rate cards, price configuration, system capacity, network depletion rules, billing engines, and customer invoices. Failure to apply the correct VAT change to any of these elements will result in either over- or underbilling of customers. This is a serious problem because an undercharge influences the operator’s revenue, causing a loss, not just because of the 1% VAT increase. Damages can reach far beyond this: an overcharge may increase customer complaints and result in reputational risk that is not limited to customer churn. This article provides insight into how fiscal policy affects industries. The insights and practical experience gathered in the research field can be used for operational improvement, training, risk identification and control development in the telco industry. A mixed-method design was used with a case study approach. This article reports on the qualitative findings. Five main themes were identified after analysing the qualitative data, namely: the effect of the VAT increase on MTN’s performance, change management, change in business processes, the impact of an incorrect VAT rate on MTN’s system, and system or process configuration. The case studied and the primary data analysed to explore the impact of a VAT increase aftermath are limited to the South African telco industry. The change management risk exposure detected, root cause analysis and insights of this article highlight the pitfalls that the project managers, change management professionals, marketing, information system and technology teams need to avoid when performing network configurations and system updates in the telco industry. Over a decade there has not been any new VAT content in South Africa since in September 1991, the original general sales tax (GST) rate of 10% was replaced by the consumption form of VAT subsequently, was adjusted to 14% in 1993. This article provides new content with a close look at the telco industry to contribute and expand the existing literature since VAT and GST are important economic aspects and contributors to the government’s income.
增值税改革实施的后果:以MTN为例
本文的主要目的是通过探索端到端电信(telco)业务流程来探索和描述增值税(VAT)增加对移动电话网络(MTN)性能的影响。就本研究的性质而言,南非和国际学术界的研究都是有限的,这些研究旨在探索对完整的端到端电信行业的理解,其中研究将着眼于电信战略的复杂性,从产品目录到费率卡,价格配置,系统容量,网络耗尽规则,计费引擎和客户发票。未能将正确的增值税变更应用于任何这些元素将导致客户的账单过高或过低。这是一个严重的问题,因为收费不足会影响运营商的收入,造成损失,而不仅仅是因为增值税增加了1%。损害可能远不止于此:过度收费可能会增加客户投诉,并导致声誉风险,而不仅仅是客户流失。本文提供了财政政策如何影响行业的见解。在研究领域中收集的见解和实践经验可用于电信行业的运营改进、培训、风险识别和控制发展。采用案例研究法的混合方法设计。本文报告了定性研究结果。在分析定性数据后,确定了五个主要主题,即:增值税增加对MTN绩效的影响,变更管理,业务流程的变化,不正确的增值税税率对MTN系统的影响,以及系统或流程配置。所研究的案例和分析的主要数据,以探讨增值税增加后果的影响仅限于南非电信行业。本文的变更管理风险暴露检测、根本原因分析和见解突出了项目经理、变更管理专业人员、营销、信息系统和技术团队在执行电信行业的网络配置和系统更新时需要避免的陷阱。自1991年9月以来,十多年来南非没有任何新的增值税内容,最初的10%的一般销售税(GST)税率随后被增值税的消费形式所取代,1993年调整为14%。本文提供了新的内容,密切关注电信行业的贡献和扩大现有的文献,因为增值税和商品及服务税是重要的经济方面和贡献者的政府收入。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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