Clock ticks on swiss banking secrecy

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Clock ticks on Swiss banking secrecy by Armando Mombelli The foreign assault against Swiss banking secrecy continues after the European Union and the United States, the G20 has joined the throng. Switzerland is ever more isolated after Luxembourg dropped its opposition to sharing bank data with its partners. In an opinion piece published by the French newspaper Le Monde on April 10, Swiss Finance Minister Eveline Widmer-Schlumpf defended Switzerland’s so-called clean money strategy, outlining the measures taken by the government to fight tax evasion. She pointed out that when Switzerland undertook reforms, it expected the international community to take note of the efforts made without launching another attack against the Swiss or threatening to take further retaliation measures. The same day, her hopes were doused when Luxembourg announced it would lift bank secrecy rules for European Union citizens who have savings based in the country from 2015 onwards. Austria, the only other staunch defender of banking secrecy within the EU, is also hinting it is ready to negotiate with Brussels. FATCA The Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act (FATCA) was passed in the US in 2010 as part of the Hiring Incentives to Restore Employment Act. It is designed to close loopholes in existing tax compliancy regulations, known as the Qualified

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Transcript of Clock ticks on swiss banking secrecy

Page 1: Clock ticks on swiss banking secrecy

Clock ticks on Swiss banking

secrecy by Armando Mombelli

The foreign assault against Swiss banking secrecy continues – after the European Union and

the United States, the G20 has joined the throng. Switzerland is ever more isolated after

Luxembourg dropped its opposition to sharing bank data with its partners.

In an opinion piece published by the French newspaper Le Monde on April 10, Swiss Finance

Minister Eveline Widmer-Schlumpf defended Switzerland’s so-called clean money strategy, outlining

the measures taken by the government to fight tax evasion.

She pointed out that when Switzerland undertook reforms, it expected the international community to

take note of the efforts made without launching another attack against the Swiss or threatening to

take further retaliation measures.

The same day, her hopes were doused when Luxembourg announced it would lift bank secrecy

rules for European Union citizens who have savings based in the country from 2015 onwards.

Austria, the only other staunch defender of banking secrecy within the EU, is also hinting it is ready

to negotiate with Brussels.

FATCA

The Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act (FATCA) was passed in the US in 2010 as part of the

Hiring Incentives to Restore Employment Act.

It is designed to close loopholes in existing tax compliancy regulations, known as the Qualified

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Intermediary (QI) accord.

The law obliges foreign firms to report offshore accounts and security trades by US clients that

amount to more than $50,000 (CHF46,500). If they fail to do so, they will be hit with a 30%

withholding tax.

The US plans to bring FATCA into force in stages, starting as early as next year.

The Swiss government has signed the accord, which parliament will be asked to ratify during its

summer session. Under the agreement, it is up to banks to pass the required data on to clients.

Clients will be able to oppose the transmission of personal data, however. The US tax authorities will

then have to ask Switzerland for administrative aid.

Exposed

This sharp shift of policy by Luxembourg and Austria could leave Switzerland even more exposed to

renewed attacks by the EU. So far, the three countries had mutually protected each other.

Luxembourg and Austria had previously stated that banking secrecy was not negotiable unless the

Swiss did the same. Bern had also rejected pressure from the EU, saying that Brussels had to

convince the two other nations first.

This tactic worked for years and the European Commission’s pressure failed to yield tangible results.

The potential breakthrough came from the United States, with Switzerland, Luxembourg and Austria

expected to ratify the FATCA (Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act) accord in the coming months.

Under this agreement, the US can obtain all the banking data concerning its citizens living in Europe,

de facto eliminating banking secrecy. Any resistance will be met with retaliatory measures, the

Americans have promised.

“Given the sanctions announced by Washington, rejecting the accord would not be a realistic

option,” said Maurice Pedergnana, an economist at the University of Lucerne.

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“Swiss banks would no longer be able to operate in the US or hold American bonds and shares. You

cannot have wealth management services without proper access to the world’s biggest financial

market.”

If Austria, Luxembourg and Switzerland give the go-ahead to the accord, they will find it hard to

resist pressure from the EU to provide the same kind of access to bank client data.

Staying secret

Which way out of the crisis?

Crunch time

On April 14, Germany, France, Britain, Italy and Spain renewed their attack on banking secrecy.

They added the automatic exchange of data to the agenda of the next EU summit in May, with an

avowed aim of making it the norm – including for Switzerland – by 2015.

New pressures surfaced following a meeting of the finance ministers of the G20 club of advanced

and emerging economies on April 19 that endorsed automatic exchange of tax data among nations,

calling it the expected new standard for how governments can help each other fight cross-border tax

cheating.

Widmer-Schlumpf told reporters after the meeting that Switzerland was ready to take part in

discussions under the condition that it was “not just a European standard but a global one” and

included offshore tax havens. This position, supported by the head of the Swiss Bankers

Association Patrick Odier, does not have the backing of the majority of Swiss cabinet members or

parliament, however, who are refusing – or at least delaying - any discussion on automatic exchange

of tax data.

For Pedergnana, waiting to see how things pan out is a recipe for trouble. “It’s a position that is

based on an outdated way of thinking and business models,” he told swissinfo.ch.

“Switzerland cannot avoid negotiating with the EU, its biggest trade partner. We are a small country

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far too involved in the global economy to behave like an island.”

He adds that playing the waiting game will reduce any wiggle room during talks.

“Switzerland should present a clear strategy and concrete proposals to get some concessions from

the EU,” he added. “And that should be, first and foremost, free access for Swiss banks to the

European financial market.”

Swiss tax woes

Switzerland has been under extreme pressure from both Europe and the US over its role as a

shelter for tax cheats since the financial crisis of 2008.

In 2009, the bank UBS was caught aiding and abetting tax evaders and was forced to pay a hefty

fine.

Then, the Swiss government was then forced to shatter its previously inviolate banking secrecy laws

to hand over thousands of client details to the US authorities.

In 2012, Switzerland's oldest private bank, Wegelin, was forced to dissolve after US investigators

found links to tax evasion. Up to 13 other Swiss banks are still under investigation by the US

authorities under suspicion of helping tax cheats.

In Europe, several CDs of client data have been stolen from Swiss banks and sold to foreign

countries such as Germany and France.

Switzerland has signed tax treaties with Britain and Austria to impose withholding taxes on accounts

held by citizens of these countries.

Germany rejected a similar deal, forcing Swiss banks to tell clients to either declare their assets to

the German authorities or close their accounts.

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“European rhetoric”

In parliament, politicians on the left agree. “We have two paths of action now,” said the centre-left

Social Democrat Carlo Sommaruga. “We can either wait to end up on a grey or blacklist, as in 2009,

and be forced to act quickly, or we can take note of what’s happening around the world and join

forces with Luxembourg and Austria to define the terms of negotiations with the EU.”

He added: “We could, for example, demand that any new standards be extended to the special tax

regimes afforded in some Anglo-Saxon countries.”

On the political right, most parties prefer to wait and see. “As long as Brussels demands we

surrender unilaterally without some compensation, Switzerland shouldn’t budge,” said the centre-

right Radical Christian Lüscher.

“The EU is piling on the pressure for so-called ethical reasons, but it is in fact trying to protect its

interior market by refusing any access to our banks.”

Politicians from the rightwing Swiss People’s Party are not even considering changes to banking

secrecy.

“We are facing the usual European rhetoric that we have wrongly taken too seriously in the past.

Brussels is not really in a position to impose anything on us as it is too dependent on Switzerland,”

said People’s Party representative Yves Nidegger.

“You only have to think about transport [to understand this]. In my opinion, the cost of a war would

be less than if we give in, as it would only lead to a weakening of our financial services.”