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March 06, 2009 Can the U.S. Tax Authorities Break Swiss Bank Secrecy? |
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The entire Swiss banking system stands as a holder of countless secret bank accounts going not just globally but back through many, many decades of such holdings. Banking for foreigners is so important to the Swiss that they passed the Banking Secrecy Act that imposes serious prison time on those who disclose such secrets. So this is not just a battle between U.B.S. the multinational Swiss Bank, but the Swiss government and the U.S. Tax Authorities.
In the States, the Tax Authorities think they have the Swiss on the run now and they know that U.B.S. bank executives are in an invidious position. But these executive know full well that they are within the laws of both countries, provided they maintain the secrecy of their clients with accounts in Switzerland [not in the U.S. though where the Swiss laws hold no Jurisdiction]. U.S. newspapers are painting a picture that the Swiss will be broken and that Swiss banking secrecy is tantamount to a crime for U.S. taxpayers. Indeed the charges being leveled against both the bank and U.S. citizens that hold accounts there are that they are evading U.S. Taxes. It is sad to see such reports and charges take such emotional lines that have departed from the realities of international law. In short, the authority of the U.S. tax authority is limited to the borders of the U.S. and those tax payers living there. Yes, it is true that even U.S. citizens living overseas are required to submit a report of their worldwide assets annually to the Tax authorities, but the power of the U.S. remains limited to the U.S. shores even here and these citizens cannot be forced to pay those taxes until they return to the States, except on the assets within the U.S. No nation outside the U.S. will impose U.S. Tax laws in their country. Two obstacles stand in the way of U.S. Tax officials imposing their will on U.S. citizens in this regard. The first is Jurisdiction and the second is the reality of a legal entity. Jurisdiction It is the real experience of the author, not the academic theory, that Jurisdiction is paramount. Some real experiences will illustrate this.
In this case, the laws of Switzerland govern the activities of the U.B.S. in Switzerland. U.B.S. activities in the U.S.A. are governed by U.S. law, but should those activities be Swiss based then the U.S. has no power to impose U.S. law in Switzerland. They can accuse Swiss officials in the U.S. as much as they like, but their jurisdiction applies only to activities inside the U.S.A. Any U.S. citizen that donated assets to a Swiss legal entity must report it to the U.S. Tax authorities [[Donation Tax will apply?], but any money made on the entity in Switzerland thereafter in the foreign legal entity is outside the scope of the U.S. Tax jurisdiction and this will come out in the present attack on the U.B.S. Under Swiss law, any U.S. citizens, against whom there is substantive evidence of a crime involving the money invested in Switzerland, the Swiss Authorities will cooperate with the U.S. authorities in passing it back to the U.S. and in its criminal investigation. However, Switzerland does not regard simple Tax Evasion as a crime! For some reason President Sarkozy of France has cast his stone at the Swiss [he appears to like the stage] and suggested that Switzerland be added to a blacklist of Tax havens. He would not do this if he believed that the Swiss could be broken by the U.S. Tax Authorities. In the seventies the Bank of England wanted to explore the Swiss based activities of certain British citizens and sent a detective to Switzerland to investigate. This official was promptly locked up for breaching Swiss banking secrecy laws. The same would happen to a U.S. Tax Official. Perhaps we will see this happen?
Legal Entities A foreign legal entity is under the Jurisdiction of the country in which it is formed. No outside Tax authority can impose taxes on it. If the entity carries on legal business what should happen is that any cash flow from that entity to the originator in a foreign land has the right to impose taxes on the repatriation of that cash flow. What also happens in some countries is that where a Tax Authority deems the entity to be placed in the foreign location solely to avoid taxes it can impose anti-avoidance taxes on the flow of cash and tax it as though there were no legal entity there in the first place. But the cash flow has to come home first. That taxation is then imposed on the individual or entity originating the foreign entity but in the country of origin. The Tax Authorities cannot step over into the foreign jurisdiction and impose their laws there!
Evasion & Avoidance
It appears that U.B.S. paid the huge fine primarily to pacify these authorities so they could continue business within the U.S. and did not admit to Tax Evasion support. If they did support such in the U.S. then we are sure that the executives concerned will be hung out to dry by their own people. Swiss bankers are extremely precise and in the U.S. they would also obey the laws of the U.S. What is tragic is that at the end of the day, U.B.S. may well depart the shores of the U.S. battered and bruised but with its Swiss secrets intact. Switzerland has been a haven for money by all types of individuals for the last 400 years. It is perhaps the main commercial activity in Switzerland. This service has gone hand in hand with the neutrality of Switzerland a policy guarded by nearly all Swiss citizens. They are unlikely to change these laws because of the huffing and puffing of U.S. Tax officials. As this goes to print we have just received the news that the Obama administration is not interested in escalating a dispute between the United States and Switzerland over bank secrecy laws. The tensions have been rising and led to a meeting between Switzerland's top Justice official and her counterparts from the U.S. Justice Department. Gold Forecaster regularly covers all fundamental and Technical aspects of the gold price in the weekly newsletter. To subscribe, please visit www.GoldForecaster.com.
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Julian D. W. Phillips
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