Tax reform proposal must go beyond the traditional jumble of rules

Discussing tax reform is almost like talking about the climate: in both cases, it is common to see that independent factors (but that sometimes interact with each other) often contribute to unexpected results. In this sense, this article proposes a brief reflection on the aforementioned “unpredictability of the result” being, perhaps, a relevant obstacle to the advance of reform proposals in recent decades.

In general, the reasoning is as follows: if someone decides to participate in a game, but suspects that their opponent may act unfairly, it would be better, for those who suspect, to (i) know the rules minimally and, thus, increase the your chance to identify or prevent an eventual opponent's ruse, or (ii) not worry about details, and trust that you will be able to identify and react appropriately, if and when your opponent is really disloyal?

Or, from another perspective, if tax authorities and taxpayers are suspicious of each other - this because they think tax authorities are more concerned with collecting than applying the law fairly and correctly, and the other because they think taxpayers distort the rules for escape payment due - then perhaps maintaining a bad but reasonably well-known system is, after all, a less risky choice than implementing a new system that may even be better, but whose conceptual deficiencies and interaction between the rules will remain , for a time, little known.

Obviously, considering that tax authorities and taxpayers always behave as adversaries, and that they presuppose each other's disloyalty, is not a credible, or even republican, premise, because tax authorities and taxpayers often cooperate and understand each other, especially when the subject is not. the collection of taxes itself.

However, the point that we seek to make in this text is different, as it is much more linked to the difficulty of discussing reforms in an environment of reasonable mutual distrust, in which the maintenance of a bad, but still manageable, status quo can be perceived as something preferable to a set of rules with unknown practical application.

Such a situation, if true, would probably be aggravated by the usual ambiguity (and consequent difficulty in interpretation) that usually permeates tax rules, as well as by the lack of certainty regarding the final result of a reform, especially when considering (i) the high potential for changes that a text may undergo during the legislative process, and (ii) the “adjustments and corrections” that often appear in non-legal acts such as decrees, normative instructions, interpretative acts, etc.

Thus, it is possible that the construction of a viable tax reform proposal requires something beyond the traditional referral to the National Congress of a pile of new constitutional rules, thought by few experts in the enclosure of their offices, and which are sometimes as ambiguous as those rules to clarify or adjust.

Perhaps, the construction of a proposal with a real chance of approval requires a broader and more collaborative effort, to be undertaken in an environment of transparency and publicity, possibly through public consultations (as in the case of several regulatory agencies regarding standards) techniques that edit), in which tax authorities and taxpayers have the opportunity to analyze and effectively discuss not only the constitutional matrix, but also drafts of laws, decrees, normative instructions and interpretative acts that will regulate the practical application of the new constitutional provisions that if you want to approve.

Of course, the end result of a tax reform proposal built in this context would, like the climate, be essentially unpredictable, at least at first.

However, regardless of the text to be produced, the installation of an appropriate forum for holding debates that could bring tax authorities and taxpayers together would, in isolation, already be an important measure to mitigate some of the uncertainties and suspicions that seem to contribute to the maintenance of the status quo .

Furthermore, in times of laws that favor transparency in dealing with public and private agents, this would be, at least, a good start.

Luiz Roberto Peroba Barbosa he is a lawyer, a partner in the tax area of ​​Pinheiro Neto Advogados, and members of the Tax Studies Center of Fundação Getúlio Vargas.

Renato Caumo he is a lawyer, associate in the tax area of ​​Pinheiro Neto Advogados, and a member of the Tax Studies Center of the Getúlio Vargas Foundation.

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Source: Legal Consultant Portal

45% of Brazilians do not know that they pay taxes when shopping

Almost 45% of Brazilians aware that they pay some type of tax in Brazil are unaware, however, that the taxes are embedded in the price of products and services they consume, revealed a survey by Fecomercio-RJ / Ipsos, released exclusively to iG.

The survey also pointed out that Brazilians perceive the incidence of municipal taxes (69%), such as IPTU and taxes on garbage and lighting, much more than indirect taxes, diluted on goods.

“Most of the population is aware of the incidence of taxes paid directly, while most of them forget about taxes diluted in everyday consumption, such as the bus fare, shopping at the supermarket or having dinner at the restaurant,” says Christian Travassos, economist at Fecomércio-RJ.

Among those who know about the incidence, the vast majority think that they pay more taxes for the consumption of items that, in fact, are not the most taxed. Food, electricity bills and clothing were cited by 9 out of 10 people when asked which taxes weigh the most in their pockets.

The percentage embedded in processed foods, for example, varies from 16% to 40%, according to data from the Brazilian Institute of Tax Planning (IBPT). The amount of taxes on the electricity bill reaches 48%, and clothing items have an incidence between 31% and 58%.

Foods that are more essential for consumption, for example, tend to be less taxed. A bag of rice priced at R $ 5 will have R $ 0,85 destined for public coffers (17%). A bottle of mustard, more expendable in the Brazilian dish, has an incidence of 40% on the price paid by the consumer.

Source: Portal iG Economia

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Expansion of Supersimples to the service sector becomes law

President Dilma Rousseff signed, last Thursday (07/08), the proposal (PLP 221/12) that benefits about 450 thousand micro and small companies from 142 activities. They will now have access to Simples Nacional or Supersimples, the simplified tax system that unifies eight federal, state and municipal taxes into a single bill.

Shortly after the sanction, the chief minister of the Secretariat of Micro and Small Business, Guilherme Afif Domingos, celebrated the change in the concept of Supersimples, which is no longer based on professional activity but focused on the billing of the enterprise and stated that the main benefit it was the universalization of the system.

In practice, the law benefits all legal entities that fit as microentrepreneurs, microenterprises and small companies, with an annual gross revenue ceiling of R $ 3,6 million. For the service sector, a new rate table (16,93% to 22,45%) was created, which varies according to the activity, such as law, brokerage, medicine, dentistry and psychology, among others.

The law arose from a project by Deputy Vaz de Lima (PSDB-SP) and was consolidated in the substitute of the rapporteur in the Chamber, Deputy Claudio Puty (PT-PA), for whom, the scope of Supersimples is seen as a package of public policies integrated, which involves reducing bureaucracy, reducing the tax burden and complying with the constitutional provision for different treatment for micro and small companies.

Reduction of bureaucracy

Several actions guarantee the reduction of bureaucracy in the processes of opening and closing companies. A unique register of entrepreneurs is created, centralized in the CNPJ, with the end of state and municipal registrations. The so-called tax substitution, used by the states to anticipate ICMS rates, also ends.

In the advocacy sector, Minister Afif Domingos predicts that the inclusion of the activity in Supersimples should increase the number of offices from the current 25 thousand to 125 thousand, soon.

Due to the tax legislation and agreements closed during the process in Congress, some provisions will only come into force on January 1, 2015. Others become effective, in fact, only in 2016, such as the prohibition of tax substitution in some sectors.

Source: Chamber News Agency

ETCO calls for rational solution to fiscal war

Concerned about many impasses of regional investments in the country, due to the legal uncertainty resulting from the fiscal war, the Brazilian Institute of Ethics in Competition defends an intensive discussion in search of a rational solution to the issue of incentives. ETCO's executive president, Evandro Guimarães, says that the solution to the conflict needs to be reached in the National Congress, where the conditions necessary to end the clashes between the states can be negotiated.

“The definitive solution is not easy, but it needs to be discussed, repeatedly, and through the legislative route, which is the appropriate forum for complex issues like this”, defends Guimarães. For him, the biggest challenge is to increase legal certainty, under the risk of investment escaping.

The Executive President stresses the importance of the discussion, possible improvement and approval of the opinion of PLC 130/14 (by Senator Luiz Henrique - PMDB / SC), making the legislative process effective with a view to ending the conflict effective.

In his opinion, approval of the opinion would be a first step in the discussion about the fiscal war.

Guimarães affirms that the approval of this first stage will signal the Congress' willingness to avoid turmoil and even greater legal insecurity, which could be established if the "fiscal war" is resolved within the Judiciary. The Federal Supreme Court (STF) has considered the benefits granted without the consent of Confaz to be unconstitutional and may vote on a binding opinion on the subject.

"If the Súmula Vinculante is approved, projects may cease their activities," says Guimarães. Companies could be at the mercy of administrative and judicial procedures aimed at charging part of the ICMS previously waived by the States, as incentives for regional industrial development.

Governors and Secretaries of Finance could also be sued for granting and maintaining incentives outside the Constitution.

Confaz calls for postponement of ICMS reform

The National Council for Farm Policy (Confaz) decided on Friday, 15/08, at its most recent meeting, to suggest to the Senate to postpone discussions on the ICMS tax reform until after the elections. Bill 130, which is being processed by the Economic Affairs Commission (CAE), tries to end the unanimity requirement for the approval of tax incentives at Confaz.

The PL rapporteur, Senator Luiz Henrique (PMDB-SC), has not yet been officially notified of Confaz's request, according to José Clovis Cabrera, coordinator of the Tax Administration of the São Paulo Finance Department. The next meeting of the CAE is scheduled for September 2 and it is likely that the senator will speak on this date on the postponement of the vote.

Despite the request for postponement, states are seeking a rapid approval of the text. One way to pressure parliamentarians was the approval in July, by a group of 20 states and the Federal District, of a proposal to end the so-called fiscal war. Through ICMS Agreement No. 70, they undertake to withdraw the tax benefits granted without approval from the agency, as well as grant a tax amnesty to all taxpayers who were assessed for having used these incentives.

"The agreement brings the steps to arrive at a tax reform, which needs to urgently leave to attract and keep investors", says Hélcio Honda, legal director of the Federation of Industries of the State of São Paulo (Fiesp). For him, the change in the presidency of the Supreme Federal Court and in its commissions may cause the summary of the fiscal war to be edited ahead of schedule. “Therefore, a solution, with a strong pulse from the Union, cannot be delayed.”

According to Honda, a summary would precipitate the judgment of actions against incentives granted without authorization from Confaz in the lower courts. “The disaster would be the retroactive effect. Everything that companies gained with tax incentives, would have to be returned ”, says Honda.

Source: Online Value

Taxation in debate

The ETCO Advisory Council met on August 14 in São Paulo (SP) to reflect on the national tax system. The meeting was attended by the Senate economist and technical consultant, José Roberto Afonso. During the meeting, the expert made an analysis of the current fiscal and tax scenario of the Brazilian economy and listed a series of opportunities for improvement. The economist highlighted the need to update Brazilian tax legal frameworks, in particular Law No. 4320/64 and Constitutional Amendment No. 18/65, which were idealized in an economic context very different from the current one.

Tax substitution

Last Wednesday, 16/07, Deputy Valdivino de Oliveira (PSDB / GO) presented his opinion for approval, with substitutive, to the Complementary Law Project (PLP) 389/14, coming from (PLS) 323/10, from former Senator Alfredo Cotait (DEM / SP), which defines the list of sectors opting for Simples Nacional (Complementary Law 123/06 ) that would be subject to tax substitution.

This substitute intends to change some articles in the Simple System Law, mainly about the way companies will pay taxes. In addition, it also appears in which cases, according to products produced, there may be tax substitution. Fuels, cigarettes, beverages and electronics are on that list.

The presented project is awaiting a decision on the opinion of the Economic Development, Industry and Trade Commission (CDEIC). Subsequently, it will be analyzed by the Finance and Taxation (CFT) and Constitution, Justice and Citizenship (CCJC) Commissions and, finally, it should be evaluated by the Chamber of Deputies Plenary, where it may receive amendments during its discussion.

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Source: Agência Câmara Notícias