nunca haverá abrangência total
isto visa acabar com as portinhas de fuga da classe média
os políticos nunca decidirão contra quem lhes dá de comer
os palhaços chamados eleitores só contam como contribuintes
continuaremos a assistir ao esmigalhar do planeta e de vastas franjas da população para que alguns badamecos possam ter montanhas de dinheiro parado e inacessível para que se possam sentir os maiores
no caso de haver um confisco em Portugal isto pode facilitar a vida aos nosso belos governantes para que possam incluir as poupanças no exterior
claro que nunca as de amigos tipo Ricardinho BES
as leis é só para as moscas
eu vou é estudar bem quem são esses 50 países
alguém sabe onde ir buscar a lista ?
Umas "excepções" assim realmente dão jeito.
http://www.theguardian.com/business/2014/nov/06/luxembourg-jean-claude-juncker-pressure-tax-dealsFrench, German and Dutch finance ministers have rounded on Luxembourg for allowing multinational companies to create complicated structures to avoid billions of dollars of tax.
Pressure is also mounting on Jean-Claude Juncker, the new president of the European commission and former long-serving prime minister of Luxembourg, who oversaw the introduction of laws that helped turn the tiny European country into a magnet for multinationals who are seeking to reduce their tax bills.
The Danish tax minister, Benny Engelbrecht, said the revelations were “shocking”. “
Tax payments are down to percentages that are so crazy that you can almost not even describe the challenges that they create for other countries,”
Juncker is credited with helping transform Luxembourg’s economy from one relying on agriculture and steelmaking into a low-tax centre for financial services. His changes turned the small nation into the world’s richest country with a per capita income of $111,000, compared with $39,000 in the UK
The revelations have sparked political outrage across the world. The Australian tax office said it had launched an investigation into whether multinational firms operating in Australia were avoiding tax by using deals arranged through Luxembourg. ICIJ documents show that Ikea’s Australian arm has paid hardly any tax on an estimated $1bn profit earned since 2003, according to the Australian Financial Review’s report on the leaked documents.