Mexico’s ‘Tax Lady’ cracks whip on multinationals’ taxes

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Raquel Buenrostro boosts state coffers by squeezing duties owed by Walmart, IBM, and Carlos Slim’s companies

As Mexico’s economy descends into its deepest recession in decades, the government has deployed its top weapon to keep tax revenue flowing: a diminutive, sweet-spoken, and tough-as-nails official who has squeezed $800m in long-contested payments out of big companies.

After taking over at tax agency SAT in January, Raquel Buenrostro — her surname means “nice face”, but her nickname is “Iron Lady” — has proved her mettle by boosting tax revenues 5.6 percent in the first four months of 2020.

And despite the economic paralysis caused by Covid-19 and Mexico’s history of woefully low tax collection, President Andrés Manuel López Obrador said state revenues were still up 2.5 percent in January to May compared with last year. Official data is not yet out.

He called it “a miracle”, and to achieve it, Ms. Buenrostro — who is one of the president’s most trusted officials, and rumored as a potential future finance minister — has trained her sights on big companies, which the government brands as tax dodgers.

She has convinced the Mexican unit of US supermarket group Walmart, Coca-Cola bottler and convenience store operator Femsa, as well as IBM and companies owned by Carlos Slim, Mexico’s richest man, to pay up. Fresnillo, the world’s biggest silver miner and part of Mexico’s Grupo Bal, has also paid just over $205m in taxes, according to a regulatory filing in the UK, where it is incorporated.

Walmart and Femsa, in statements to the stock exchange at the end of May, said they were paying 8.079bn pesos ($374m) and 8.79bn pesos respectively. Walmart said it was to “conclude substantial fiscal matters”, while Femsa said its payment “finalized differences of interpretation” over taxes paid abroad. The companies did not admit any wrongdoing.

Mr. Slim has not disclosed any sum. Mr. López Obrador announced IBM would pay 669m pesos and said the carmaker Toyota had made payments as well, although no further details were available.

No one at SAT had immediate comment.

The president, who is crusading to eradicate corruption and has ruled out tax increases, said in April the government would pursue “those who don’t want to pay” via administrative sanctions and criminal charges. He said 15 large companies owing 50bn pesos ($2.3bn) in back taxes had been identified, although he did not name them.

Ms. Buenrostro, who says steel, pharmaceuticals, food, cars, mining, retail, and energy companies have the biggest debts, told Reuters news agency four or five criminal complaints had been filed against companies, but no details were immediately available.

Experts said the prospect of being in trouble with an authority that had emerged as one of Mexico’s most powerful institutions was enough to convince many people and companies to put their tax affairs in order.

But they fear that officials’ big stick — legal reforms last year that allows executives of companies and individuals accused of tax crimes to be jailed before trial — could easily be abused.

“I believe it’s fiscal terrorism,” said Max Diener, a professor, and former federal tax prosecutor. He called Ms. Buenrostro an “excellent public servant” but feared she had enormous, and “very dangerous”, discretionary power.

“They are using undue pressure and coercion to get deals,” including “unprecedented” requests for information, said Enoch Castellanos, head of the Canacintra industry group that represents mostly small and midsized businesses.

Mr. Castellanos said SAT had started cracking down on businesses that did not make payments by the 17th of every month — a tougher stance than previously. “On the 18th, they start proceedings and apply a fine equivalent to 50 percent of the debt,” he said.

Ms. Buenrostro, a mathematician, had worked in the Mexico City government when Mr. López Obrador was mayor, as well as other federal positions. She has emerged as one of the president’s key lieutenants after saving an estimated $9bn by slashing spending and centralizing government procurement in the government’s first year in office.

When it comes to tax collection, Ms. Buenrostro has argued that she is just being fair and efficient. “Everything is in line with the law, everyone has to comply,” she told legislators this month, promising “zero privileges and zero waivers”.

She added: “It’s not fiscal terrorism because people are paying up. Those who feel threatened and pressured are the ones who aren’t.”

The higher collection is a boon for a country where tax revenue represents only 16 percent of gross domestic product, the lowest level in the OECD. Despite Mr. López Obrador’s optimism, tax revenue fell 25 percent in April, compared with March, as the Covid-19 recession bit. Economists expect GDP to fall almost 9 percent this year. 

“It’s good if they’re collecting old debts, but it won’t be enough,” said Mariana Campos, a public finances specialist at México Evalúa, a think-tank.

“Tax collection is obviously going to fall further” because of the economic contraction, said Diana Bernal, a former taxpayers’ ombudswoman. She said SAT was strong-arming some companies into paying even while the sums in question were being disputed in court or still under audit.

“They want to sell the story that the rich [people and corporations] don’t pay tax,” she said. According to OECD data, however, Mexico earns a fifth of tax revenue from corporate taxes, the highest proportion in the OECD.

Ms. Buenrostro’s tactics in previous roles have stirred controversy. Her centralized purchases last year created bottlenecks that led to shortages of important medicines, and her power pushed Carlos Urzúa to quit as finance minister in July last year.

Nevertheless, she plans to push ahead, and businesspeople expect her to succeed. “Raquel Buenrostro is very good at collecting,” Ms. Bernal said. “But it’s very easy when you have a garrotte in your hand.”

Source: ft.com

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