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US Rejects Global Deal With Switzerland Over Tax Evasion - Media
Tom Burroughes
19 July 2011
The US
has rejected signing up to a global deal involving Switzerland that is designed to
settle tax evasion disputes, Swiss media reports said. The SonntagsZeitung
newspaper said the US
authorities had written to the State Secretariat for Economic Affairs and the
finance ministry in Switzerland
informing them of their decision. There has been speculation that the US and Switzerland,
which have been at loggerheads over cross-border tax issues in recent years,
were to agree on a voluntary disclosure scheme that would impose fines and
require banks to hand over client data in return for the US agreeing to halt
legal action. The disputes have already claimed one major victim: UBS. In
2009, Switzerland’s biggest
bank and the third largest wealth manager by assets had to pay a $780 million
fine to settle criminal charges of helping rich US
citizens evade taxes. Later that year, Switzerland
and the US
agreed that UBS must pass over thousands of client account details to settle a
separate civil legal case. The bank, along with a number of other Swiss
financial institutions, no longer provides offshore bank services to US
clients. Credit Suisse, meanwhile, is being investigated by the US
Department of Justice as part of a broader industry inquiry, as reported by
this publication a few days ago. The investigation concerns historical private
banking services provided on a cross-border basis to US persons, and the bank
received a letter notifying it that it was also being investigated. It is not
just Swiss banks that have come under the microscope; HSBC has come under
investigation, as reported earlier this year, and the probe widened to include
Israeli and Asian banks.