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Swiss bracing for change in bank secrecy
By
BALZ BRUPPACHER, Associated Press Writer Balz
Bruppacher, Associated Press Writer, March 5, 2009
BERN, Switzerland – Switzerland is bracing for a monumental change in a
tradition of banking secrecy that survived pressure from Nazi Germany,
World War II and numerous other crises over the last 75 years.
It
will have a hard time withstanding an American legal onslaught intact.
With
the largest Swiss bank, UBS AG, in a showdown with Washington over wealthy
American tax evaders, Switzerland's federal government has been dealt the
unenviable task of avoiding sanctions abroad while gently burying the
myths at home it has helped create about confidential banking.
Rudolf Merz, Switzerland's president and finance minister, was still
taking a tough stance Thursday. "I cannot imagine how we could abolish
banking secrecy," he told reporters. "Bank
secrecy is
part of the social idea, the mentality of
Switzerland,
and it is
the protection of privacy."
But
others, including Oswald Gruebel, a widely respected banker who came out
of retirement last week to head UBS, are suggesting bank secrecy laws will
have to be changed to ease the pressure being put on this small Alpine
nation.
"It's questionable whether we can continue to hide tax evaders behind
banking secrecy," Gruebel told the newspaper Finanz und Wirtschaft in an
interview published last weekend.
On
Wednesday, a U.S. Senate committee criticized UBS for evasive answers on
about 50,000 American-held accounts Washington is interested in, and
authorities in Switzerland's European neighbors are growing equally
impatient.
A
three-member panel will present options to the full government Friday on
what to do about the demands.
The
fight recalls the uproar in the 1990s over Jewish accounts left unclaimed
after World War II. Switzerland failed initially to gauge mounting
pressure from the U.S., and Swiss banks were forced into a $1.25 billion
out-of-court settlement with the descendants of Holocaust survivors.
This
time, the squabble is over how the Swiss assist foreign authorities
investigating tax evasion. Switzerland differentiates between the crime of
tax fraud and the minor offense of evasion, and providing assistance to
foreign governments probing tax evasion is punishable by law.
Switzerland passed its banking secrecy laws in 1934 during a worldwide
depression and under the threat of espionage by France and Germany, which
aggressively courted Swiss bank employees to divulge the names and data of
customers. Strict penalties were imposed for violating bank
confidentiality.
Still, secrecy rules have eroded. Swiss officials have retooled the rules
over the past two decades to allow cooperation with governments trying to
reclaim assets stashed in Switzerland by despots before they were deposed.
But
expanding the changes to deal with all foreign tax evaders would be much
more sweeping.
UBS
has formally accepted responsibility for helping Americans hide assets
from the U.S. government and agreed to pay $780 million in fines and
restitution. It also turned over the names of about 300 U.S. clients that
possibly committed tax fraud, but it is not giving the Internal Revenue
Service the names of all American citizens who maintained secret accounts
with the bank.
At
the Senate hearing Wednesday, senior UBS executive Mark Branson said the
bank could not disclose much of the information sought by U.S. tax
authorities because it would put employees at "serious risk" of criminal
prosecution under Swiss law.
The
Swiss government refused to send a representative to the hearing.
But
Justice Minister Eveline Widmer-Schlumpf visited Washington earlier this
week and has shown some softening of the national position. She said the
government would consider helping foreign authorities investigating "gross
tax evasion" — a new distinction that has not previously existed.
The
government is in a tough spot, battling to avoid being blacklisted as an
uncooperative tax haven when representatives of the Group of 20 leading
economies meet in London in April. But it is struggling to get unified
support at home, with secrecy changes being vehemently opposed by two
pro-business parties in Switzerland's broad governing coalition.
Merz
said Switzerland is ready to talk with the United States and European
neighbors that are frustrated over money flowing out of the reach of tax
collectors. He said the willingness to negotiate should make the G-20
reconsider threats to put Switzerland on any blacklist.
He
predicts a "dynamic development" in Swiss law, and many people think it is
increasingly likely that will mean dropping the differentiation between
tax fraud and evasion.
Gerhard Roth, a tax expert and managing partner at the Swiss law firm GHR,
calls it an "arbitrary distinction created to facilitate tax evasion."
"If
Switzerland wants to save banking secrecy it needs to go on the offensive
now," Roth said. "In today's world you can't argue anymore that it's
morally right to place banking secrecy above tax evasion."
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Balz
Bruppacher has headed The Associated Press' Swiss Service since 1983 and
has extensively reported on Switzerland's banking sector for three
decades.
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