
From the former Director of the Customs Collection and Control Agency (ARCA), Juan Pazoa man of utmost trust Luis Caputoeven the minister himself and even the press and broadcasting department of the Banco de la Nación Argentina left the government this Saturday after the “Fiscal Innocence” law was passed on Friday evening
The aim is to formalize and put on the streets as quickly and massively as possible the “mattress dollars” that Argentines have at their disposal, in order to stimulate the economy while generating a circulation and supply of dollars that will make it easier for the Ministry of Finance and the Central Bank (BCRA) to purchase and accumulate international reserves.
“If your banks ask you to do additional things (reading, breaking the P…), don’t waste time. You can go to the Banco Nación, where the president will give you the instruction to strictly follow the laws; that is, the person only has to prove that he has complied with the simplified income regulation. He deposits his dollars in the bank and can immediately use them to make the desired consumption or to save through interest, like anywhere in the world,” Caputo posted.

The Banco Nación account on the social network
Caputo even gave him one How to the contribution of one
Compliance with the “simplified earnings regulation” is a prerequisite in order to benefit from the “Tax Innocence” law. This afternoon, Juan Pazo, former director of ARCA and one of the authors of the initiative passed into law by the Senate, explained in a radio broadcast that the only requirement for the presumption of “fiscal innocence” is to provide proof of registration with the new regime.
“If they ask you, because there are times when the compliance officers often burn their heads and they have been forcing us to work in a rather complex way for more than 70 years, they may ask for some kind of information, but of course citizens must know that there is no obligation to provide more documents than registration in the simplified income regime. As I said at the beginning, the property is yours, you can dispose of it as you want,” Pazo explained, specifying this even before the law was passed. 20,000 people joined the simplified earnings system.
Asked whether he believes the “mattress dollars” will now “take to the streets” because people are encouraged to spend them without fear of tax prosecution, Pazo replied: “I personally have no doubts. In every province I visited, in every city I visited, the first thing they asked me was: When will the law come into force? I want to change the car, I want to change the tractor, I want to make a repair on my house. All of this is economic activity. That’s on top of that.” The changes that have taken place in these 24 months will create the necessary conditions to restore trust and allow these funds to flow into the system. And I emphasize that formalization also allows those who do so to have access to long-term loans to buy a house, a car or something similar.
When reminded that some opponents believe this is a law in favor of tax evaders, Pazo added: “The first thing I want to make clear is that the vast majority of people paid taxes. The employees who paid taxes, who withheld, paid and withheld their earnings, and when they wanted to protect their savings and buy more than $200, the government went after them as if they were criminals. These people were already paying taxes and the only thing they wanted to do was preserve the value of their savings: now they have “Die.” Ability to store it on the system. This criticism is quite hypocritical. What we see, and now it’s very clear, is that all the corrupt people, the drug traffickers and many taxpayers who can’t justify anything have done what they wanted in recent years. Meanwhile, they were stalking people and driving them crazy into buying a washing machine.
“They asked you to cut the supermarket bill if you exceeded 100,000 pesos. What we saw was crazy. There is nothing more democratic than this law because it allows everyone who has really saved and tried to protect their savings to put them into the system,” Pazo concluded.