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Venezuela Tax Agency Closes McDonald's Temporarily

Venezuela Tax Agency Shuts McDonald's Nationwide for 48 Hours, Citing Alleged Irregularities

The Venezuelan government has ordered nearly all McDonald's restaurants in the country closed for 48 hours for what it calls irregularities in the fast-food chain's financial books.

A man walks past a closed McDonald's restaurant at a mall in San Cristobal, Venezuela, Friday, Oct.... Expand
(AP)

The tax agency said it ordered more than 100 McDonald's restaurants temporarily shut on Thursday. Agency head Jose David Cabello announced on state television that "inconsistencies" were found in sales and purchases books, as well as in taxes collected. The restaurants will be allowed to reopen on Saturday.

Of the 132 McDonald's restaurants in Venezuela, 118 were closed, including all 80 of the outlets run by Caracas-based franchisee Alimentos Arcos Dorados de Venezuela CA, spokesman Rolando Chavez told The Associated Press on Friday.

Arcos Dorados — "golden arches" in Spanish — said it has obeyed Venezuelan laws and regulations and is abiding by the sanctions. It said the order stemmed from "formal issues affecting purchasing and sales records."

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Under President Hugo Chavez, the tax agency has carried out inspections of companies and frequently punished those it says aren't complying with rules. Both domestic and foreign businesses are regularly affected.

The agency took a similar action against McDonald's three years ago, ordering a three-day closing of 80 restaurants as a penalty for allegedly failing to follow tax rules. Last year, the Venezuelan subsidiary of Coca-Cola Co. also was shut down for 48 hours, and last month, the offices of Pepsi were ordered shut for the same period.

Chavez's supporters often accuse U.S. companies of exploiting Venezuelan workers and have called for boycotts in the past against the likes of Coca-Cola, McDonald's and Nike.

But analyst Pedro Palma of the Venezuelan economic consulting firm MetroEconomica said the closing of the Oak Brook, Illinois-based McDonald's shouldn't be interpreted as an attempt to pick on U.S. companies.

"They've closed many Venezuelan businesses also," Palma said, noting that tax inspectors often take such measures for even minuscule record-keeping lapses.

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