Fiscal pedaling (a calque from Brazilian Portuguese: pedalada fiscal, or simply pedaladas) is a governmental creative accounting technique involving the use of state-owned banks to front funds required for paying general government obligations without officially declaring a loan, thus hiding these transfers from public scrutiny[1][2] and delaying repayment from the Treasury to these banks.[3] As such it is a kind of "overdraft"[4] implying a positive balance sheet that does not really exist.[3] Sometimes the term fiscal backpedaling is used.[5]

The term gained popularity with the Brazilian Presidential election of 2014, in which President Rousseff was reelected. She was later accused of fiscal pedaling during the campaign, for allowing this delay in repayment to government-owned banks by the Tesouro Nacional (Brazilian Treasury) which is also the entity which oversees these banks. Her opponents argued that this amounted to undeclared loans by these banks to the Treasury, which is prohibited by the Brazilian Constitution[6] and a violation of the Fiscal Responsibility Law.[3] This led to the impeachment of Dilma Rousseff beginning in 2015 on multiple charges including fiscal pedaling, and her subsequent removal from office a year later..

One possible motivation for fiscal pedaling is political advantage, in that it permits a government to conceal the true extent of its fiscal obligations during a political campaign. President Rousseff's government was accused of using these accounting techniques during the bitterly fought campaign of 2014, with the funding thus obtained allegedly used to support programs for the poor, credits to farmers, and subsidies for low-income housing.[1] Supporters claimed this was standard practice in Brazil and had been engaged in by previous Presidents, and that the opposition to her was purely political.[2]

See also

References

  1. 1 2 Leahy, Joe (2016-05-12). "What is Brazil's president Dilma Rousseff accused of?". FT. Financial Times. Retrieved 2017-06-09.
  2. 1 2 Jacobs, Andrew (2016-04-20). "Brazil Impeachment Debate Hinges on a Thorny Legal Question". The New York Times. Retrieved 2017-06-09.
  3. 1 2 3 Doctor, Mahrukh (September 1, 2016). "Country Focus: Brazil". Political Insight. 7 (2): 32–35. doi:10.1177/2041905816666148. S2CID 152113812.
  4. Quintanilha, Gabriel (2016-04-18). "Fiscal Pedaling - Brazilian Artificial Accounts". world.tax. Retrieved 2017-06-09.
  5. Nascimento, Luciano (2016-03-31). "Law scholar says fiscal backpedaling is ground to impeach Rousseff". Agencia Brasil. Retrieved 2017-06-09.
  6. "Lei Complementar nº 101, de 4 de Maio de 2000" [Supplementary Law n.101 of 4 May 2000] (in Portuguese). Presidência da República do Brasil. 4 May 2000. Art. 36: Credit operations are forbidden between a state financial institution and the Federal entity which oversees it in the capacity of loan beneficiary.
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