SóProvas


ID
1054369
Banca
FCC
Órgão
SEFAZ-RJ
Ano
2014
Provas
Disciplina
Inglês
Assuntos

Why Is Spain Really Taking Lionel Messi to Tax Court?

By Jonathan Mahler Sep 27, 2013
So Spain has decided to haul Lionel Messi into court for tax evasion, which strikes me as completely insane on pretty much every level.
You may remember the story from a few months back: The greatest soccer player in the world and his father were accused of setting up
a bunch of shell companies in Belize and Uruguay to avoid paying taxes on royalties and other licensing income.

Messi - who makes an estimated $41 million a year, about half from sponsors - reached a settlement with Spain’s tax authorities earlier
this summer, agreeing to pay the amount he apparently owed, plus interest. The matter was settled, or so it seemed. Messi could go
back to dazzling the world with his athleticism and creativity.
Only it turns out that Spain wasn’t quite done with Messi. His adopted country - Messi is Argentine but became a Spanish citizen in 2005
- is now considering pressing criminal charges against him.
Cracking down on tax-evading footballers has become something of a trend in Europe, where players and clubs have been known to
launder money through “image-rights companies” often set up in tax havens. When you need money - and Europe needs money - go to
the people who have it, or something like that. Over the summer, dozens of Italian soccer clubs were raided as part of an investigation
into a tax-fraud conspiracy. A number of English Premier League clubs were forced last year to pay millions of pounds in back taxes.
No one likes a tax cheat, and there’s little doubt that widespread tax fraud has helped eat away at the social safety net in Spain and
elsewhere, depriving schools, hospitals and other institutions of badly needed funds. But Europe is not going to find the answers to its
financial problems in the pockets of some professional soccer players and clubs.
Messi’s defense, delivered by his father, seems credible enough to me. “He is a footballer and that’s it,” Messi’s father Jorge said of his
soccer-prodigy son. “If there was an error, it was by our financial adviser. He created the company. My mistake was to have trusted the
adviser.” Even if Messi is legally responsible for the intricate tax dodge he is accused of having participated in, it’s pretty hard to believe
that he knew much about it.
More to the point, Lionel Messi is probably Spain’s most valuable global asset. What could possibly motivate the Spanish government to
want to tarnish his reputation, especially after he’s paid off his alleged debt? After four years of Great-Depression level unemployment,
have anxiety and despair curdled into vindictiveness?
Here’s another explanation: Maybe this whole case has less to do with money than it does with history. Maybe it’s no coincidence that
the target of the Spanish government’s weird wrath happens to play for FC Barcelona, which is, after all, "mes que un club." It's a symbol
of Catalan nationalism - and a bitter, longtime rival of Spain’s establishment team, Real Madrid.
Too conspiratorial? Prove it, Spain. Release Cristiano Ronaldo’s tax return.

(Adapted form http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2013-09-27/why-is-spain-really-taking-lionel-messi-to-tax-court-.html)

Which of the following alternatives is the “odd man out”?

Alternativas
Comentários
  • Alguém explica essa questão???

  • Eu acho que é o seguinte:

    A expressão "odd man out" quer dizer o que é estranho dentro de um grupo, " um estranho no ninho". Então a questão pede qual a alternativa tem significado diferente das demais. Dentre as alternativas você tem 4 expressões que tem o sentido de sonegação, evasão de impostos (dodge, evasion, fraud, cheat) e no caso a expressão "tax return" , letra B, não corresponde a este significado.

  • O erro da questão não está no tempo verbal usado e sim na parte em que diz que "RRI fornece respostas para a multitude dos problemas envolvendo o uso da tecnologia." O certo seria "problemas envolvendo a pesquisa e inovação tecnológicos" e não apenas o uso da tecnologia em geral. There´s nothing to do with present perfect.

  • Questão mal formulada quanto ao enunciado das alternativas.

  • Na verdade a questão só quer saber qual das alternativas é diferente, ou seja, 4 alternativas têm significados similares e uma alternativa tem significado diferente das demais. Demorei a entender isso.

  • Realmente essa foi pra tirar de tempo o candidato. Mas realmente essa foi aquela pergunta, "qual o termo não combina com os demais?".

  • A) tax dodge.(sonegação fiscal)

    B) tax return.(declaração de imposto.) GABARITO

    C) tax evasion.(evasão fiscal.) 

    D) tax fraud.(fraude fiscal.)

    E) tax cheat.(fraude fiscal.)
     

  • A expressão  "odd man out" quer dizer: estranho, diferente.  A questão se refere à  alternativa que contém significado diferente das demais. Dentre as alternativas temos  expressões que têm o sentido de sonegação, evasão fiscal, fraude.

    A) tax dodge. - sonegação fiscal
    B) tax return. - declaração de imposto
    C) tax evasion. - evasão fiscal
    D) tax fraud. - fraude fiscal
    E) tax cheat. - fraude fiscal.

    A expressão "tax return" é bem diferente das demais expressões.
    Gabarito do professor: B



     
  • b-

    A more accurate term would "odd one out" (one is an all-encompassing pronoun for every context, while 'man' takes on a more humanistic slant).

    All options relate to some sort of bamboozling act. Apart from tax return, which is standard procedure.

  • Qual das seguintes alternativas é o "estranho no ninho"?

    (A) tax dodge.

    sonegação fiscal

    (B) tax return.

    declaração de imposto.

    (C) tax evasion.

    evasão fiscal.

    (D) tax fraud.

    fraude fiscal.

    (E) tax cheat.

    fraude fiscal.

    Comentários: De acordo com o dicionário Cambridge, a expressão “odd man out” significa “a person or

    thing that is different from or kept apart from others that form a group or set” (uma pessoa ou coisa que é

    diferente ou mantida separada de outros que constituem um grupo ou conjunto). Em português, podemos

    traduzir como aquilo ou aquele que está deslocado, separado ou segregado, ou seja, “um estranho no

    ninho”.

    Observe que as alternativas A, C, D e E se referem a irregularidades tributárias (tax dodge - sonegação

    fiscal; tax evasion - evasão fiscal; tax fraud - fraude fiscal; tax cheat - fraude fiscal). Somente a alternativa

    B se refere a uma regularidade fiscal, a declaração de imposto (tax return), que, nesse contexto, tornou-se

    um “estranho no ninho”.

    Gabarito: B