Government unfreezes R$1.7 billion from the 2024 Budget – Money Times


(Image: MF/Diogo Zacarias)

Benefiting from the gradual re-taxation of the payroll, the government thawed R$ 1.7 billion of Budget of 2024, announced tonight the ministries of Planning and Budgeting and Finance. The volume of frozen resources fell from R$15 billion to R$13.3 billion.

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The figures are included in the new edition of the Bimonthly Revenue and Expenditure Report, a document that guides the execution of the Budget sent this Friday (20) to the National Congress.

According to the report, the volume of blocked expenses increased by R$2.1 billion, from R$11.2 billion to R$13.2 billion, but the R$3.8 billion contingency announced in July was reversed, releasing a total of R$1.7 billion in expenses.

Both contingency and blocking represent temporary spending cuts.

The new fiscal framework, however, has established different motivations. The freeze occurs when government spending grows more than the 70% limit of revenue growth above inflation.

Contingency occurs when there is a lack of revenue that compromises compliance with the primary result target (result of government accounts without interest on public debt).

In relation to the blockade, the main increases in expenses that justified the increase of R$ 2.1 billion were the increases of R$ 5.3 billion in the estimates of expenditure on Social Security and of R$ 300 million in expenditure on Continuous Benefit Payment (BPC).

These increases were partially offset by the forecast drop of R$1.9 billion in the Aldir Blanc Law to promote culture, R$1 billion in estimates for personnel expenses and R$900 million in cost and investment court orders.

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Primary deficit

The reversal of the contingency, reported the Planning and the Farmis the result of a R$4.4 billion increase in net revenue (revenue left over for the federal government after transfers to local governments).

This increase is explained by the R$2 billion increase in gross revenue and the R$2.4 billion drop in transfers to states and municipalities.

The increase in the revenue estimate led the government to reduce the primary deficit estimate for 2024 to R$28.3 billion. The amount is R$400 million, lower than the minimum limit of the tolerance margin for meeting the target.

For 2024, the new fiscal framework establishes a zero deficit target, with a tolerance margin of R$28.75 billion, either way.

The primary deficit is the negative result of the government's accounts without interest on the public debt. The current fiscal framework excludes from the target the R$29 billion in extraordinary credits to rebuild Rio Grande do Sul nor the R$514 million to combat forest fires announced this week.

Gradual payroll tax reduction

When breaking down revenues according to source, the main factor behind the increase was the incorporation into the estimates of compensation measures for the payroll tax relief, approved by Congress last week and sanctioned last Monday (16). This law will reinforce federal coffers by R$18.3 billion by the end of the year.

To fund the gradual re-taxation of payroll taxes for 17 sectors of the economy and small municipalities until 2027 instead of re-taxing everything at once, the law provides for measures to collect revenue from other sources.

Of the R$18.3 billion, the largest part, R$8 billion, will come from the transfer to the National Treasury of judicial deposits in closed cases. Another R$6.3 billion will come from judicial and extrajudicial deposits held at Caixa Econômica Federal; and R$4 billion will come from the version of Desenrola for regulatory agencies.

Unmanaged prescriptions

There are other resources not managed by the Federal Revenue Service that will help to strengthen the government's coffers.

There are an additional R$10.1 billion in dividends from state-owned companies that paid the National Treasury more than initially projected and R$4.9 billion in royalties of oil, which came from the increase in the dollar and the revision of barrel price estimates.

In contrast, the report reduced the revenue projection from the railway concession by R$3.5 billion.

When adding the R$18.3 billion from the gradual payroll tax increase and these revenues, the total revenues not managed by the Federal Revenue Service were revised upwards by R$30.1 billion.

Carf

This amount helped to offset the R$25.8 billion drop in resources managed directly by the Tax Authorities due to delays in the publication of agreements at the Administrative Council for Tax Appeals (Carf), the administrative body of the Federal Revenue Service that judges debts of large taxpayers.

Originally, the economic team expected to raise R$55.6 billion in 2024 with the reintroduction of the government's tie-breaking vote in Carf.

However, the delay in publishing the sentences and agreements, due to statements of clarification, in which the parties ask for doubts to be clarified, delayed the entry of money.

Now, the government only expects R$847 million from September to December.

The report also reduced net revenue for Social Security by R$2.3 billion.

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