Showing posts with label Swiss Banks. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Swiss Banks. Show all posts

Friday, March 28, 2014

Sharing of bank a/c details: India threatens legal action against Switzerland



BS Reporter  |  New Delhi  March 28, 2014 Last Updated at 00:57 IST

Says may declare Switzerland a non-cooperative jurisdiction

In what might lead to a diplomatic row between India and Switzerland, Finance Minister P Chidambaram has sent a strongly-worded communication to his Swiss counterpart, threatening action under domestic laws against that country over its reluctance to share information on 500 Indians who are alleged to have stashed money in HSBC’s Geneva branch.

According to officials, an action under the I-T Act could mean declaring Switzerland a non-cooperative nation — a move similar to what India earlier did with Cyprus. It becomes financially cumbersome for Indians to make transactions with citizens of a nation declared non-cooperative.

“In the event of continued denial of access to vital information, which Switzerland is obliged to provide under the DTAC (Double Taxation Avoidance Convention), India may be constrained to actively consider the options available under our domestic laws,” Chidambaram said in his letter dated March 13 to Swiss Finance Minister Eveline Widmer Schlumpf.

The Section 94A India had inserted in the Income-Tax Act in 2011 empowers it to notify a country non-cooperative (in technical jargon, a notified jurisdictional area), if there is lack of effective exchange of information. If a country is notified as non-cooperative, it affects transactions entered into by assessees in India with citizens of that country. For example, any payment made to a person of that country will attract a withholding tax of 30 per cent.

Also, if a sum is received from a person in that country, the onus is on the assessee to satisfactorily explain the source of such money in the hands of such persons, otherwise it is treated as the assessee’s income. Also, no deduction in respect of any payment made to any financial institution in that country is allowed unless the assessee furnishes an authorisation allowing for seeking relevant information from the said financial institution.

India had invoked this provision against Cyprus and relented only after the European nation agreed to exchange information and amend tax treaty with India.

However, officials concede, unlike Cyprus, Switzerland is a big country and there might be difficulties in declaring it non-cooperative. Switzerland’s GDP stood at $360 billion (on purchasing power parity) in 2012, while Cyprus had just over $23 billion.

Chidambaram said Switzerland had not honoured the terms of DTAC between the two nations under which information about Indians with accounts in Swiss banks had been sought by tax authorities.

“Switzerland’s refusal to provide information to India and other countries on the grounds that the source of the information requested is based on ‘stolen data’ means that, in practice, Switzerland still believes in bank secrecy and is, therefore, not in tune with the modern era,” he said in the letter.

When contacted, an official at the Switzerland Embassy in New Delhi refused to comment immediately.

Syed Akbaruddin, the spokesperson for the external affairs ministry, said: “We will definitely not go against the finance  ministry. Governnment means one entity.”

India wants Switzerland to provide information on bank accounts held by Indians that were part of an HSBC bank list made available to India by the French government. French authorities had provided a list of over 500 Indian citizens who allegedly held HSBC accounts in Geneva.
FIRM STANCE
Excerpts of Chidambaram’s letter to his Swiss counterpart


* “You’d appreciate that, such a situation, where there is no effective exchange of information between India and Switzerland despite a clear legal obligation of Switzerland under the DTAC, is a matter of grave concern for India”

* “The Swiss govt had proposed revision of the domestic law for providing information under the tax treaties... which would have enabled Switzerland to provide information to India in the HSBC cases... However, it is learnt the proposed revision did not take place due to strong political opposition in Switzerland”

* “Switzerland's refusal to provide information in serious cases of tax evasion in India is a sensitive matter in India too.”

* “If information continues to be denied to India under DTAC, the Government of India will be constrained to take a position at the global forum that Switzerland still does not comply with the standards of transparency and that the required legal and regulatory framework is still not in place in Switzerland... India may also have to raise the issue at fora such as G-20”
The data were called stolen by Swiss authorities because a French employee of HSBC Geneva had obtained the information through unauthorised means before it landed with the French government in 2008-09. India had made its request to Switzerland for details in 562 cases.

Chidambaram’s letter said: “You would appreciate that, such a situation, where there is no effective exchange of information between India and Switzerland despite clear legal obligation of Switzerland under DTAC is a matter of grave concern for India.”

He requested that country to reconsider its move, saying India was seriously concerned that some taxpayers might have parked substantial unaccounted money and assets abroad.

Chidambaram also threatened to raise the issue of non-coopearation by Switzerland at international fora like G-20 and the global forum of the Organisation of Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD).

Akbaruddin confirmed this could be the next step. “We will see when we can take it up.”

The issue has become more important in the country as corruption has been one of the Opposition parties’ biggest election plank against the ruling Congress party. Also, the Supreme Court had on Wednesday pulled up the Centre for its failure in bringing back black money stashed abroad.

Friday, May 28, 2010

Swiss banks' love for Indian clients no secret, woo back depositors who withdrew funds on fear of action


Source :28 May 2010, 0638 hrs IST,Sugata Ghosh,ET Bureau

MUMBAI: The famously secretive Swiss private banks are trying to persuade Indians to bring back the money they have pulled out from their numbered accounts in these banks.

In the last one year, more than a hundred Indians with secret accounts have shifted money from Switzerland to banks in Dubai Free Trade Zone and Singapore amid fears of regulatory and government action.

“The Swiss banks are now reaching out to these clients to get back the funds they have lost. There’s no estimate of how much money has moved out, but it could be substantial in absolute terms,” said a senior Mumbai-based professional dealing in tax and cross-border transactions.

And interestingly, some of the account holders have moved back money to Swiss banks because of their long relationship with these private wealth managers. “But there’s a difference. The money that’s going back may not be parked in a numbered account. Instead, it could be a corporate deposit,” said a foreign exchange regulations expert who has advised clients on such fund transfers.

Individuals with numbered accounts have become used to a transaction convenience that is absent in most banking services.

While these accounts offer no interest and even charge a fee for holding the money, many depositors prefer them. The client does not have to write a cheque for any transaction, but simply call up a dedicated relationship manager and share a code given by the bank to complete the transaction.

“The manager uses a voice recorder to cross-check that the caller is indeed the holder of the numbered account. A client can call up from anywhere in the world to operate the account,” said a private money manager. According to him, clients draw comfort from the belief that in case of enquiries, the bank will do whatever it takes to protect the account holders’ identities. Till three years ago, these accounts offered an interest of 1-1.25%, but that has now stopped, he said.

It’s learnt that most of the money has been transferred to Dubai, where the transaction is in the nature of a trading receipt with a company set up in the free trade zone.

I-T notice to 50 on German list

The company receives a commission or consultancy fee. After a decent interval, the company in Dubai can open a new account with the Swiss bank to bring back the money. Some have transferred the funds to banks in Singapore, which, bankers say, is becoming the new destination for parking cash.

“Despite the stigma attached to Dubai, many still prefer it to Singapore for tax reasons. Some of the Swiss banks don’t have a branch in Dubai, so they want to get back such deposits. To them it’s free fund,” said the money manager.

Tax professionals as well as bankers know that legal complications make it difficult for governments and regulators to trace such fund flows. For instance, tax authorities have made little headway after Germany handed over names of secret account holders to Indian authorities.

Under Section 147 of the Income-Tax Act, the tax department can ask a person to file a return to take into account the income that has escaped assessment. However, under Section 148, the assessee can ask the department the reasons for reopening the file.
“It’s here that our I-T people will face a problem. Germany, as per the treaty with India, has told Indian authorities not to initiate proceedings against these people unless criminal actions or links are established. So, it would be difficult to pull them up unless the authorities can spot activities such terror funding, drug running, etc. Tax evasion is not a criminal offence,” said an income-tax expert.

So even though the income-tax department has sent notices to some 50 individuals a few months ago, it may end up achieving very little. Till then, the Swiss and other European banks will fish for clients and funds they have lost to other friendly, though less-efficient, offshore centres of the world.