crazy_dave: I guess I'd understand if they were trying to protect a fledging Brazilian industry (not ... necessarily agree with, but at least understand) - one reason I think FoxConn and Apple are building a new iPad factory in Brazil is to get around the import taxes to sell to the "emerging" Brazilian market. However as far as I know, there are no Brazilian joystick manufacturers ... so why bother with such a high import tax?
I'm a fairly liberal guy and I'm all for progressive taxes and the like, but import sales taxes are decidedly not progressive and if they target everything with huge import taxes, all they do is price items not available in your own country out of the reach of the common people which means they can't buy it anyway and/or encourage black market deals - which mean you see zero taxes anyway. Ack ...
Sorry I don't mean to derail the thread about economics. :/
No problem, we can talk all we want until someone with more advice comes along. Specifically, I was hoping someone might have something to say about the precision on that Thrustmaster Stick X.
Well, there *are* brazillian joystick brands, but they're all low quality and manufactured in China... So, yeah, taxes are mostly useless in this and many other cases. There was a movement some time ago to put games in a special "culture" category, which has lower rates, but it either didn't work, or is stuck in the myriad of laws to be still voted.
Well, there are reasons we're so underdeveloped.
In another front, we do have some pretty good consumer laws. If I buy a joystick through the internet, I actually have a week to test it, and return it if I don't like it, and I don't even have to pay the return shipping. I think I'm going to do that with the Thrustmaster if I can't find anyone to tell me more details.