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News > Sport

World's Biggest Corporations Won't Pay Taxes at the Olympics

  • Volunteers walk between branded tables at the Olympic Park in Rio de Janeiro.

    Volunteers walk between branded tables at the Olympic Park in Rio de Janeiro. | Photo: Reuters

Published 17 August 2016
Opinion

Brazil will lose about a billion dollars in revenue thanks to a law that turns the Olympics into a tax haven.

Coca-Cola, McDonald's, Visa and the rest of the corporate sponsors of the Olympic Games in Rio de Janeiro won't be paying any taxes on the money they earn there due to a tax exemption law that's set to cost Brazil hundreds of millions of dollars.

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The exemption, which lasts until Dec. 31, 2017, excludes from taxes revenue generated by advertising, product sales, imports and any other activity related to the organization of the games.

"It is yet another manifestation of the privileges that multinationals worldwide have today," said Antonio Martins, director of the alternative Brazilian news outlet Outras Palavras. "And it's not an isolated event, which is limited to a sports mega event," he told the BBC.

Brazil has 37 million people living in extreme poverty, its economy is currently in recession and the interim government of Senate-imposed President Michel Temer has approved a fiscal austerity program. Meanwhile, the country is expected to lose about a billion dollars in tax revenue thanks to the exemption, according to BBC.

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According to Naomi Fowler of the Tax Justice Network, the tax exemption on corporations is a precondition forced on any candidate to host a world sport event.

“Every country must accept that they will become a tax haven for these companies during a period of time,” Fowler told the BBC.

Among the main sponsor companies of Rio 2016 are Coca-Cola, McDonald's, Visa, Bridgestone, Samsung, Panasonic, Omega, Procter & Gamble, General Electric, Nissan, Globo, Nike, Microsoft and Airbnb.

According to organizers, the Olympic Games are an opportunity for the host country to bring in tourists, invest in infrastructure and promote a healthy lifestyle among its citizens, but it’s also true that most countries are in debt after the games and have to undertake severe austerity measures.

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