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Why are medical-expense deductions in Brazil generous on paper but dangerous when records are sloppy?
A Brazilian taxpayer hears that medical expenses can be deducted and assumes that is the end of the story. Please explain why these deductions are so often questioned and why 'I really paid it' is not the same as having an audit-proof file.
Related Questions
Why does church tax in Germany feel unavoidable when paid and then quietly reappear as a special-expense deduction rather than as a real reversal of the burden?
People often hear that church tax is deductible in Germany and imagine the deduction must largely neutralize the charge. Please explain why that is too optimistic, why the deduction still matters, and why a deductible tax is not the same thing as a refunded tax.
Why do Germany's extraordinary-burden rules still refuse to deduct every painful cost just because life was genuinely difficult?
Taxpayers in Germany often hear about außergewöhnliche Belastungen and assume serious personal costs should naturally count. Please explain why the rule is still narrower than that, why the reasonable-burden threshold matters so much, and why real hardship is not automatically the same thing as deductible hardship.
Why does Japan's donation deduction reward certain giving only after you pass through a surprisingly formal tax gate?
People often think charitable or public-interest giving should naturally produce tax relief. Please explain why Japan's donation deduction is more formal than that, why qualifying recipients and documents matter so much, and why generous intent by itself is not enough for the return.
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