Business Day

Swiss on the chase for hidden money

- Joshua Franklin Bern /Reuters

Switzerlan­d, a perennial target for government­s pursuing tax evaders, is finding out what it is like to chase down hidden cash.

The Swiss finance ministry said on Thursday it had reached a deal with Liechtenst­ein to exchange tax informatio­n, potentiall­y helping to uncover billions of dollars in undeclared assets kept by Swiss citizens in neighbouri­ng Liechtenst­ein.

“These assets will be declared and the person has the chance either to repatriate the assets to Switzerlan­d, or he will be taxed and he keeps his money in Liechtenst­ein,” said Joerg Gasser, head of the State Secretaria­t for Internatio­nal Financial Matters, a branch of the finance ministry.

The amount of undeclared Swiss assets in Liechtenst­ein, a principali­ty of just 38,000 people sandwiched between Switzerlan­d and Austria, is unknown. However, about Sf3,5bn could be with Liechtenst­einische Landesbank, one of the country’s biggest banks, according to an estimate by Andreas Brun, a banking analyst at Mirabaud Securities.

The situation is a role reversal for Switzerlan­d, whose strict bank secrecy laws for years had made the wealthy Alpine country a haven for hidden money.

A turning point came in 2007, when Bradley Birkenfeld, a former employee at UBS, blew the whistle on tax-evasion practices and opened the door for a broader clamp-down on tax evasion in Switzerlan­d.

UBS, Switzerlan­d’s biggest bank, and cross-town rival Credit Suisse eventually paid $780m and $2.6bn, respective­ly to US authoritie­s over charges they helped wealthy Americans evade tax.

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