Latest News

Brazil proposes to offset fuel tax reductions by using the oil windfall.

Brazil's Government on Thursday announced a bill that will be sent to Congress, under which the additional?revenue generated by higher oil prices due to the U.S./Israel conflict with Iran would offset reductions in?federal tax on fuels. Planning Minister Bruno Moretti said the proposal was aimed at achieving full fiscal neutrality. Tax reductions would be dependent on extra revenues generated by an increase in oil prices. Dario Durigan, Finance Minister, said that the government was working on a two-month "calibrated" reduction.

The government of President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva is taking this step to "minimize the impact" of the higher oil prices for consumers as a result the conflict in the Middle East.

Jose Guimaraes said, "We cannot make people pay for this war."

Lula is now preparing to run for re-election in October, after his lead over senator Flavio Blsonaro has evaporated. Polls show that they are now tied. Last month, the leftist leader’s administration abolished federal taxes on gasoline and announced subsidies for cooking gas. It also eliminated federal taxes on biodiesel blended with diesel and jet fuel. Moretti said that the approval of the bill would allow the federal government to issue a decret to reduce the federal taxes PIS and CIDE when they are applied to fuels. CIDE, while embedded in the economy and based on revenue from companies, is a regulatory tax.

Calculating the additional revenue due to higher oil prices will include the state-run Brazilian oil company PPSA as well as dividends and royalties linked to the oil sector. This is compared to the?original government revenue projections in the budget law for the year. "If the bill passes Congress, we'll implement a partial tax reduction on gasoline and ethanol," said Finance Minister Durigan.

According to estimates by the government, each 10-cent reduction in federal gasoline taxes over a period of two months would result in a loss of revenue worth 800 million reais (159.70 millions)

In a press release issued earlier that day, the Finance Ministry stated the government would reduce some gasoline taxes. However, Durigan told reporters during the conference that such a measure would not be announced.

(source: Reuters)