Argentina's congress approves fiscal innocence law

Argentina's Congress turned the 'Fiscal Innocence' bill into law on December 26, introducing tax system reforms that simplify declarations and update penalties. The measure aims to normalize patrimonial situations and draw undeclared savings into the formal economy. Critics view it as a disguised money laundering scheme, while supporters praise it for reducing fiscal persecution.

The Fiscal Innocence Law, approved on Friday, December 26, 2025, reforms the Tax Penal Regime, Procedure Tax Law No. 11.683, and the Civil and Commercial Code on prescription matters. It introduces the Simplified Sworn Declaration Regime (DSIG) for resident individuals, allowing Ganancias tax declarations based solely on invoicing, regardless of patrimonial variations.

To join DSIG, taxpayers must have total income up to one billion pesos and assets up to ten billion pesos as of December 31 of the previous year, and not be classified as a major national contributor by ARCA. The law presumes the accuracy of Ganancias and IVA declarations, except for significant discrepancies, such as adjustments over 15% or amounts exceeding evasion thresholds.

It updates penal thresholds: simple evasion rises from 1.5 million to 100 million pesos, and aggravated from 15 million to 1,000 million. It shortens the prescription period to three years for timely declarations without discrepancies. It modifies fines, raising penalties for non-filing from 200-400 pesos to 220,000-440,000 pesos, though without a uniform criterion.

President Javier Milei described it as 'a money laundering without tax payment', with non-revenue purposes, to shield 'good Argentines' and attract dollars from the 'mattress'. Juan Pazo, former ARCA head, defended it as the end of a 'Soviet regime' of persecution, focusing on simplifying controls and ensuring freedom in using savings, facilitating credit access and reducing tax pressure by over 2.5 PBI points.

Juan Manuel Álvarez Echagüe, UBA professor, criticizes the law as an 'indirect money laundering' without amnesty, inviting undeclared income by ignoring patrimonial consumption, creating legal uncertainty. The norm also exempts adherents from reporting assets and limits penal complaints if obligations are paid before filing.

相关文章

President Javier Milei celebrates 2026 budget and Fiscal Innocence Law approval in Argentine Congress, with economic gains and subtle social protest shadows.
AI 生成的图像

Milei Closes 2025 with 2026 Budget Approval and Fiscal Innocence Law

由 AI 报道 AI 生成的图像

Building on the December 22 cabinet meeting at Olivos where these were prioritized, Javier Milei's government secures approval of the 2026 Budget and enacts the Fiscal Innocence Law. These milestones ensure fiscal discipline amid IMF demands but face criticism over impacts on vulnerable groups like the disabled and public workers. Analysts hail macroeconomic gains while cautioning on social costs for 2026.

President Javier Milei has made progress in formalizing undeclared savings, with nearly 300,000 Argentinians declaring over US$20 billion in a tax amnesty program. However, the end of the CERA account immobilization period on January 1, 2026, poses a key test for confidence in his economic management. Analysts warn that changing the 'under the mattress' savings culture will take years.

由 AI 报道

The debate on Colombia's Financing Law in Congress was suspended until Tuesday due to lack of quorum in the Fourth Commission of the House of Representatives. The bill aims to raise $16.3 trillion to fund a 2026 budget of $546.9 trillion, but faces opposition and potential cuts if not approved. President Gustavo Petro warned of a possible default, while experts like Anif dismiss that risk.

The Budget and Finance Committee in the Chamber of Deputies ratified Alberto 'Bertie' Benegas Lynch as president, as La Libertad Avanza speeds up the 2026 Budget process. The ruling party aims to issue the report on Tuesday and bring it to the floor on Wednesday, despite opposition demands for financial compensations. Negotiations persist amid tensions between allied blocs and the opposition.

由 AI 报道

UDI deputies Jorge Alessandri and Guillermo Ramírez warned they will file a constitutional accusation against Finance Minister Nicolás Grau if the government insists on reintroducing a provision that makes it harder to dismiss contract public servants in the public sector readjustment bill. This 'tying law', deemed immoral by the UDI, aims to secure jobs for government allies, sparking divisions within the opposition and criticism from the ruling coalition. The announcement, made on Thursday, plans to introduce the motion in March.

Argentine justice conducted 35 simultaneous raids on the AFA headquarters, its Ezeiza training ground, and 17 football clubs over alleged ties to Sur Finanzas, linked to president Claudio “Chiqui” Tapia. The operations, ordered by Judge Luis Armella, aim to seize documents probing potential money laundering via contracts and loans. Prosecutor Cecilia Incardona leads the investigation into the firm's owner, Ariel Vallejos.

由 AI 报道

Following tense anticipation, Argentina's National Senate approved the 2026 Budget on December 26 with 46 votes in favor, 25 against, and one abstention, achieving the first fiscal balance in decades despite opposition criticism over cuts to education and science funding. The ruling party hailed the milestone, while opponents decried impacts on key sectors.

 

 

 

此网站使用 cookie

我们使用 cookie 进行分析以改进我们的网站。阅读我们的 隐私政策 以获取更多信息。
拒绝