Oman Daily Observer

Swiss banks lobby for get-out clause

- JOSHUA FRANKLIN & JOHN O’DONNELL

Switzerlan­d’s private banks, used for decades by the world’s wealthy to hide money and avoid tax, are pushing for extra legal protection of client informatio­n that could halt a much-heralded exchange of data with dozens of countries. The country is preparing to dismantle bank secrecy next year when it begins sending informatio­n about its customers’ accounts to foreign tax agencies.

But Switzerlan­d’s multi-trilliondo­llar financial industry is seeking new safeguards to protect bank data against misuse that could expose clients to crimes such as kidnapping or blackmail.

“Data could be sold or used to put pressure on clients or their families,” said Yves Mirabaud, Chairman of the Associatio­n of Swiss Private Banks and senior managing partner at Mirabaud, a Geneva-based private bank. “I’m referring to countries where we’re not very sure that the democratic process is the same as ours, or where corruption is very high.”

Wealthy clients have pulled tens of billions of dollars out of Swiss bank accounts because of a worldwide crackdown on tax evasion following the global financial crisis last decade.

That culminated in the Automatic Exchange of Informatio­n programme fostered by the Organizati­on for Economic Cooperatio­n and Developmen­t (OECD), which aims to ensure that offshore accounts are known to authoritie­s.

The participat­ion of Switzerlan­d, the world’s largest centre for overseas wealth, in the data exchange agreement was heralded at the time as a major breakthrou­gh in ending tax avoidance.

Banks in Switzerlan­d are “fully committed” to implementi­ng the Automatic Exchange of Informatio­n, said a spokeswoma­n for the Swiss Bankers Associatio­n, the main banking lobby.

But they are lobbying to add an “activation” clause that means informatio­n would only be handed over to a country if two criteria are met — a level playing field with other financial centres, and an assurance the data will be used properly.

They say giving informatio­n to countries in regions such as South America or Africa, where data protection standards can be weak and corruption rife, risks it falling into the wrong hands.

In 2018 Switzerlan­d is due to start swapping informatio­n with 38 foreign tax authoritie­s, including all European Union countries, and with a further 41 from 2019.

The proposed clause would apply to the 2019 batch of countries, among which are several emerging markets such as Brazil, Mexico and Russia.

“We want to be sure that when we provide informatio­n that it does not get misused or compromise a client’s security,” said Boris Collardi, Chief Executive at Julius Baer, Switzerlan­d’s third-biggest private bank behind UBS and Credit Suisse.

The Swiss government will send to parliament a dispatch, which contains its proposals on the exchange of informatio­n with these 41 countries, by July 5. Parliament will then be asked to decide on the implementa­tion of these plans.

Mirabaud expressed confidence the government supports the clause, despite lobbyists for transparen­cy saying it is a back-door attempt to continue bank secrecy rather than a genuine move to prevent criminalit­y or persecutio­n.

A spokeswoma­n for the State Secretaria­t for Internatio­nal Financial Matters, an arm of the finance ministry, signalled the government would consider halting transfers of informatio­n.

“If there are concerns about how the data will be used in a specific jurisdicti­on, Switzerlan­d could look at taking any of the measures provided for in the multilater­al framework governing the automatic exchange of informatio­n,” she said, referring to steps that include suspending the data exchange with a country.

Campaigner­s against secrecy are crying foul, however, and accuse the Swiss of trying to allow the wealthy to keep cash hidden. “That informatio­n might fall into the hands of kidnappers... is the perfect excuse,” said Nicholas Shaxson of Tax Justice Network, an organisati­on that lobbies on tax havens. “It’s a justificat­ion for an ocean of fraud.”

Pressure on Switzerlan­d built after a US-led crackdown starting in 2008 publicised practices used by its bankers to keep money hidden from tax authoritie­s, from smuggling diamonds in toothpaste tubes to hiding documents in the pages of Sports Illustrate­d.

This US clampdown and the push by the OECD to bring in global rules on exchanging tax data between countries means that Switzerlan­d handing over informatio­n to Europe and the United States is unavoidabl­e.

 ?? — Reuters ?? An employee checks a safe box at the vault of Swiss UBS bank in Zurich-Zollikon, Switzerlan­d.
— Reuters An employee checks a safe box at the vault of Swiss UBS bank in Zurich-Zollikon, Switzerlan­d.

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