Brazil

Costa Ricas rapid adoption of the Sinpe Mvil payment platform, as documented by recent reports and official data, has transformed the countrys retail landscape and banking sector.The Central Bank launched Sinpe Mvil in 2015, but its use soared after the pandemic.
By late 2024, 76% of Costa Ricans over age 15 actively used the system, conducting hundreds of millions of transactions each year.This shift reduced cash use and cut banking costs, as banks processed fewer cash transactions and managed lower operational expenses.
Retailers and consumers embraced Sinpe Mvil for its speed and simplicity.The system allowed instant payments for everything from groceries to services, with more than half of users paying for goods or services through the platform.
However, this convenience came at a cost.Businesses, especially in the informal sector, began using Sinpe Mvil to collect payments without issuing invoices.
This practice allowed them to underreport income and avoid value-added tax and income tax obligations.Costa Ricas Mobile Payment Surge Fuels Widespread Tax Evasion.
(Photo Internet reproduction)Closing the Sinpe Mvil Tax LoopholeThe Ministry of Finance confirmed that the state loses significant tax revenue each year because many businesses exploit this loophole.
Experts and tax authorities agree that the payment method itself is not the root cause of evasion.Instead, the lack of integrated controls enabled widespread underreporting.
The absence of an automatic tax withholding mechanism for Sinpe Mvil transactions further contributed to the issue.Unlike card payments, which automatically withhold taxes, Sinpe Mvil transactions left it up to businesses to self-report sales.
Many did not, and the government struggled to track these payments effectively.The Ministry of Finance and the Central Bank have responded by developing a new system to automatically withhold value-added and income taxes.
This system applies to business transactions made through Sinpe Mvil.The new mechanism, expected in 2025, will not affect personal transfers.
It aims to close the loophole and ensure that businesses pay their fair share of taxes, leveling the playing field for formal and informal commerce.This move comes as Costa Rica seeks to strengthen its fiscal position and maintain its reputation for financial transparency.
The Sinpe Mvil story highlights how digital innovation can bring efficiency and inclusion but also new risks if regulatory frameworks do not keep pace.





Unlimited Portal Access + Monthly Magazine - 12 issues


Contribute US to Start Broadcasting - It's Voluntary!


ADVERTISE


Merchandise (Peace Series)

 


Trump and Meloni Signal Confidence in U.S.-E.U. Trade Deal Amid Tariff Standoff


Brooklin Overtakes Vila Olímpia as São Paulo's Priciest Rental Market


Trump Administration Ties Ukraine Support to Mineral Access, Warns of Withdrawal


Panama Squeezed Between U.S. and China as Canal Becomes Geopolitical Battleground


Costa Rica’s Mobile Payment Surge Fuels Widespread Tax Evasion


Washington Targets Chinese Shipbuilding Dominance With Escalating Port Charges


International Wine Industry Hits Six-Decade Lows as Weather Extremes and Consumer Shifts Reshape Market


China Cuts Off U.S. LNG Imports, Shifting Global Gas Dynamics


Peru's CB90 Deal: Swedish Know-How, Local Assembly, and a New Model for Defense Industry Growth


U.K. Supreme Court Anchors Legal Definition of 'Woman' to Biological Sex in Landmark Ruling


U.S. Chip Curbs Expose China's Reliance on Irreplaceable Western Tech


Trade and Talks Stalled: Sheinbaum Keeps Mexico-Ecuador Diplomatic Rift Unresolved Under Noboa


[Brazil] - Itaú Lowers Brazil's Inflation Forecast, Holds Interest Rates Steady Amid Global Trade Uncertainty


China Shakes Up Trade Team as U.S. Tariffs Hit 245%, Names Legal Strategist Li Chenggang


California Takes Legal Action Against Trump Tariffs, Defending State's Export Economy


Brazilian Homebuilder MRV Bets on Land Sales and Policy Shifts to Reverse 2024 Slump


[Brazil] - Brazil's Refining Gap Cements China's Monopoly on Critical Mineral Exports


[Brazil] - Brazil's Army Chief Sounds Alarm as Defense Cuts Collide with Rising Threats


[Brazil] - Paraguay and Brazil Restore Bilateral Relations and Resume Itaipú Energy Talks


Honda Exits Canada and Mexico, Consolidates Car Production in U.S.


Colombian Manufacturing Falters as Key Sectors Struggle in Early 2025


[Brazil] - Flooded by Imports: The Real Cost of Brazil's Growing Dependence on China


Trump Pushes to Tax Harvard as Political Entity Over Woke Activism and Antisemitism


Brazil’s Wind Power Sector Faces Deepest Crisis as Investment and Output Plunge


Brazil’s Supermarket Sector Hits $180 billion, Drives Jobs and Growth


Mobly Faces Hostile Takeover as Dubrule Family Seeks Control at Deep Discount


Apple Surges to Top in Global Smartphone Sales for Q1 2025


Méliuz Moves to Make Bitcoin Core Treasury Asset, Calls Shareholder Vote


U.S. Tourism Faces Sharpest Drop Since Pandemic, $90 Billion at Risk


56% Mandate: Noboa Defeats González in Contested Election as Ecuador Battles Record Violence


[Brazil] - Economic Calendar: Key Market Events for the Week from April 14 to April 18, 2025


Argentina Ends Currency Controls as Milei Pushes Economic Overhaul


A New Pearl in China's Necklace Bangladesh's Pivot on South Asia's Strategic Board


India’s Strategic Ascent in Trump’s Trade Tempest


The Silent Heist: Should America's Financial Might Stop China's Capital Betrayal


[Brazil] - Crime Wave Grips Brazil as 58% Report Rising Criminality


Whale Accumulation Hits 7-Week High: Large Holders Buy $1.2B Bitcoin During $74K Bottom


A Delicate Dance in Muscat: U.S. and Iran Face Off in High-Stakes Nuclear Talks


Football Games for Saturday, April 12, 2025: Match Schedule and Live Broadcast


Cyrela Reports 34% Sales Growth in Q1 2025 Amid Record Launches


Randoncorp Projects Record Revenue for 2025 Amid Strategic Investments


Tariffs and Copper Prices Pressure Chilean Peso on April 11, 2025


Argentine Peso Pauses After Volatile Week While Economic Pressures Persist


Brazil’s Financial Morning Call for April 11, 2025


Tariff Shield Boosts Mexican Peso Amid Global Trade Tensions


Colombian Peso Struggles Against US Dollar Amid Global Pressures on April 11


Silver at $31.243 Reflects Cautious Recovery in Global Markets


Copper Prices Steady Amid Global Trade Tensions and Supply Shifts


Oil Prices Edge Up Amid Trade War Tensions and Supply Fears