Itaú Unmasked: The “Progressive” Bank That Became São Paulo’s Biggest Tax Deadbeat
By Hotspotnews
For years, Banco Itaú positioned itself as a champion of “social responsibility,” pouring money into progressive causes, diversity initiatives, and partnerships that aligned neatly with leftist governments and cultural agendas in Brazil. Now, the mask has slipped. The same institution stands exposed as São Paulo’s largest debtor, owing the city nearly R$ 20 billion in unpaid taxes while ordinary Brazilians face blacklisting for missing a credit card payment.
This is not a minor accounting error. According to investigations by the São Paulo city council’s CPI do Devedor, Itaú allegedly orchestrated a sophisticated tax avoidance scheme. The bank reportedly established façade offices in Poá, a neighboring municipality with a far lower ISS (service tax) rate of just 0.25%, compared to 2% in the capital. By routing operations through these shell structures, particularly involving its Itaucard division, Itaú is accused of shortchanging São Paulo taxpayers on a massive scale. The result? A multibillion-real “rombo” — a gaping hole in the public coffers — that has made Itaú the undisputed king of the city’s debtor list.
Even more damning, the bank has already been judged and condemned for bad faith (má-fé) by municipal authorities. This means Itaú now faces a qualified 100% fine, forcing it to pay double — the original debt plus the full penalty. The CPI has summoned its executives, including the finance director, for explanations — the third time the bank has come under this commission’s scrutiny. The stated goal is to recover funds that could support hospitals, schools, and public safety.
Think about the hypocrisy. If a working-class family falls behind on bills, their name lands in Serasa, credit dries up, and life becomes harder. Yet when one of Brazil’s most powerful financial giants allegedly games the tax system for years, enforcement moves at a glacial pace. Appeals, litigation, and bureaucratic delays allow the debt to linger while the bank continues posting strong profits and distributing billions in dividends to shareholders. This is classic elite privilege: rules for thee, but not for me.
Itaú’s defenders will no doubt call this aggressive tax planning or a technical dispute. But the numbers don’t lie, and neither do the optics. This is the same bank long accused by conservatives of financing the machinery of cultural and political leftism — from sponsorships that advanced progressive narratives to cozy relationships during PT administrations. While preaching social justice, it allegedly deprived the city of resources that could have funded essential services — the very services conservatives fight to deliver efficiently without endless tax hikes.
São Paulo’s taxpayers, many of them small business owners and workers already squeezed by Brazil’s crushing tax burden, are right to be furious. They play by the rules. They face audits, fines, and bureaucracy. Meanwhile, massive corporations with armies of lawyers and accountants find creative ways to minimize their contributions — and when caught, treat penalties as just another line item.
This scandal exposes a deeper rot in Brazil’s relationship between big finance, big government, and the political left. Banks like Itaú thrive in an environment of high taxes and complex regulations that they can navigate while smaller competitors and citizens cannot. Conservatives have long warned that crony capitalism dressed up as “progress” harms the nation. When powerful institutions fund ideological agendas with one hand and evade their civic duties with the other, ordinary Brazilians pay the price through higher effective taxes, poorer services, and eroded trust.
The unmasking of Itaú should serve as a wake-up call. Brazil needs lower, simpler taxes that apply equally to everyone. It needs aggressive pursuit of tax evaders regardless of their political donations or marketing slogans. And it needs leaders who put the productive taxpayer first — not financial giants who lecture society on morality while treating public coffers as optional.
The Brazilian people have had enough of two-tiered justice. Itaú’s R$ 20 billion debt — now doubled by fines — is more than just numbers on a ledger. It is a symbol of elite detachment and the urgent need for real fiscal responsibility and equal application of the law. Time to collect what is owed, end the delays, and reform the system so this stops happening again.

