Brazil: Developments impacting all businesses
International Tax Review is part of the Delinian Group, Delinian Limited, 4 Bouverie Street, London, EC4Y 8AX, Registered in England & Wales, Company number 00954730
Copyright © Delinian Limited and its affiliated companies 2024

Accessibility | Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | Modern Slavery Statement

Brazil: Developments impacting all businesses

intl-updates-small.jpg

Brazil has been busy with issuing new tax guidance, committing to tax objectives with partner nations and preparing a comprehensive tax reform bill.

Giacobbo
Gottberg

Fernando

Giacobbo

Ruben

Gottberg



Tax authorities release guidance on the disclosure of final beneficiaries in Brazilian corporate taxpayer register

The Brazilian tax authorities (RFB) issued Normative Instruction (NI) No. 1729/2017 on August 15 2017, which updates the obligation to disclose the final beneficiaries in the corporate taxpayer register.

By way of background, NI No. 1634/2016 established the obligation to disclose information related to final beneficiaries in the corporate taxpayer register (CNPJ). According to the legislation, the term "final beneficiary" refers to:

  • An individual who ultimately, either directly or indirectly, holds, controls or significantly influences an entity; or

  • An individual on whose behalf a transaction is undertaken.

A shareholder is deemed to have significant influence if the individual:

  • Owns, directly or indirectly, more than 25% of the entity's capital stock; or

  • Has the ability to influence the decision-making and elect or appoint members of the entity's management.

NI No. 1.729/2017, recently issued, clarifies that the disclosure of the final beneficiaries can be made up to 90 days from the date of the register in the CNPJ (this term may be extended for another 90 days upon request) and that the supporting documentation should be submitted online.

Foreign entities registered in Brazil before July 1 2017 will have until December 31 2018 to comply with the disclosure obligation and submit the supporting documents. Note that if an entity updates its CNPJ before December 31 2018 for any other reason, the disclosure obligation will arise at the date of such a change.

BRICS sign memorandum of cooperation in tax matters

The heads of the tax authorities of the five countries that form the BRICS (Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa) signed a Memorandum of Cooperation in Tax Matters on July 27 2017.

This landmark document shows the commitment of the countries to implement the G20 tax agenda, including the BEPS project and the automatic exchange of information, in order to foster economic growth and counteracting tax avoidance and aggressive tax planning.

Note that, over the past year, Brazil has introduced tax rules to comply with the BEPS minimum standards and it has recently filed a request to become a member of the OECD.

Brazil discusses comprehensive tax reform bill

The Brazilian Representative Luiz Carlos Hauly presented to the President and his ministers a bill for a comprehensive tax reform on August 22 2017 that foresees the end of 10 taxes in Brazil.

According to the bill, the ICMS (state VAT on sales and certain services), ISS (municipal service tax), IPI (federal excise tax), COFINS (federal social contribution on billing), PIS/PASEP (federal contribution to the social integration programme), CIDE (federal contribution for intervention in the economic domain), IOF (tax on financial operations) and the Salário-Educação (educational allowance) will be consolidated into a new tax (a VAT), whereas the CSLL (federal social contribution on net income) will be absorbed by the IRPJ (Brazilian corporate income tax).

In addition, a selective tax will be created to be levied on products of seven industries: electric power, fuels, telecoms, tobacco, beverages, automobiles, tires and auto parts.

This comprehensive project of tax reform is expected to involve approximately 11 bills and a proposal for an amendment to the Constitution.

The bill is expected to be presented for debate in the Congress shortly.

Fernando Giacobbo (fernando.giacobbo@pwc.com) and Ruben Gottberg (ruben.gottberg@pwc.com)

PwC

Website: www.pwc.com.br

more across site & bottom lb ros

More from across our site

The Australian Taxation Office scored a victory over the company last year in a case that will be closely watched by other multinationals
Nigeria looks to boost inefficient tax collection, Singapore plans to hit GST fraudsters hard, Italy and UK confirm reciprocity of VAT refunds, and more
The UK is also lagging behind other countries in use of technology for compliance purposes, Christiaan Van Der Valk argues
As a new agreement between India and Mauritius may unsettle foreign investment, Sanjay Sanghvi and Avin Jain of Khaitan & Co examine the possible impact and offer potential solutions
A vast majority of corporates – especially smaller businesses – rely on a trusted referral when instructing external counsel, according to a survey of nearly 29,000 in-house counsel
It comes as the US remains uncommitted to the pillar two rules; in other news, ‘Bitcoin Jesus’ faces charges over tax evasion and false tax returns
The US is capitalising on a fertile deals market to take centre stage in tax talent recruitment, according to insights from ITR+’s Talent Tracker
The EU’s CBAM is a considerable compliance task for any in-scope companies. As payments loom for many businesses from 2026, tax departments will need to step up and take the lead
The firm also pledged to boost its commitment to AI and reinventing clients’ business models
High-earning businesses place most value on the depth of the external legal teams advising them, according to a survey of nearly 29,000 in-house counsel
Gift this article