Swiss banks face hefty fines under US tax deal

"The deal offers individual Swiss banks the opportunity to avoid US prosecution if they agree to pay 'substantial fines', disclose all of their cross-border activities, provide details on the accounts of US citizens, and give information on the sources and destinations of transferred funds in relation to secret American accounts. Each bank will set its own non-prosecution agreement or deferred-prosecution agreement with the US authorities under those terms. The fines will be assessed at 20-50 percent of the aggregate value of any undeclared accounts held by Americans, depending on the time they accounts were open — before 2009 or since then." Continue reading

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Foreign Retirement Plans Seen Scrutinized in U.S. FATCA Effort

A U.S. tax crackdown is coming for foreign retirement plans. The U.S. has been pushing banks and individuals to report overseas assets, making it tougher to hide money abroad with new rules and penalties rolling out under the 2010 Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act, known as Fatca. The next wave of scrutiny will cover retirement accounts, Bloomberg BNA reported. “The retirement community has been a little slower to catch up,” said Russell E. Hall, a senior consultant at Towers Watson. Foreign retirement plans generally must agree to report their U.S. account holders to avoid a 30 percent withholding tax on U.S.-sourced interest, dividends and proceeds from the sale of securities beginning July 1. Global companies with programs overseas will need to catalog their funded retirement plans to figure out which ones may be exempt, Hall said. Continue reading

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France adds Jersey, Bermuda to tax-haven blacklist

"France has added Jersey, Bermuda and the British Virgin Islands to its list of uncooperative tax havens. The entry gave no reason for the move. According to data compiled by the French government through to August 2011, Jersey and Bermuda had responded to all French requests for information. The British Virgin Islands had responded to 31 out of 41 requests. Tax has always been a sensitive issue for France, which has among the highest tax takes in the developed world, but President Francois Hollande has been under pressure to regain the initiative after the embarrassing resignation of his budget minister this year over a secret Swiss bank account." Continue reading

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Luxembourg says No to new EU tax law

"Luxembourg, one of the EU's smallest but richest countries, has said No to a new law against tax evasion. The European Commission has been trying to update its anti-tax-fraud legislation for the past eight years. Its 2005 law forces member states to automatically exchange information on EU nationals' deposits in other European Union countries. But it contains gaps on income received via investment funds, pensions, trusts and foundations. It also contains a big hole on Austria and Luxembourg. The two financial centres are exempt from automatic exchange until such time as five non-EU tax havens - Andorra, Liechtenstein, Monaco, San Marino and Switzerland - agree to it as well." Continue reading

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Arrests in Vanuatu over dubious citizenship approvals

"Among those arrested are a former chairman of the Citizenship Commission and former MP, Jack Eric, and a former secretary of the Commission, Eloi Leye. Chief Inspector, George Toomey, has declined to give details but says those investigated include politicians, leaders and public servants. He says the suspects have been selling Vanuatu citizenship at a low price and ignored the law that requires ten years’ residence for a foreigner to become a citizen. Sources close to the citizenship office and police say it has became a tradition that a month before general elections, politicians collect applications forms from the citizenship office in order to receive sponsorship for their political campaign." Continue reading

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South Korea Toughens Up Rules On Overseas Accounts

"In a bid to reduce the incidence of tax evasion, the National Tax Service (NTS) is to impose heavier fines on those South Korean residents who are found to hold substantial unexplained financial accounts in overseas jurisdictions. Beginning next year, South Koreans with overseas financial accounts worth more than KRW1bn (USD896,000) will be obligated to report the assets, and to explain the sources of the funds. Failure to do so will result in a 10 percent fine, which will be even greater if the source is found to be the result of tax evasion. The NTS's plans are included within the Government's new proposals to raise additional tax revenue for its welfare programs by improving tax compliance." Continue reading

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Banker Groups Sue Treasury, IRS Over Account Reporting Rule or (DATCA)

"Two banker groups sued the U.S. challenging rules that require financial institutions to report information on accounts held by nonresident aliens that may be shared with 72 foreign governments. The Texas Bankers Association and the Florida Bankers Association, in a lawsuit filed today against the Treasury Department and the Internal Revenue Service in federal court in Washington, said the rules are discouraging investment in the U.S. by nonresidents who fear their information may be shared with the governments of countries including Egypt, Pakistan and Venezuela." Continue reading

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How the IRS Violates Legal Tender Laws

"One would think that it is more costly to deal with non-cash methods of payment. In any case, the last time I checked, the Federal Reserve Notes in my wallet all still bore the notice, 'This note is legal tender for all debts public and private' This means that they cannot be refused by the creditor for repayment of a debt previously incurred–especially not for payment of taxes, which are the pre-eminent 'public debt.' While the IRS may not be strictly in violation of legal tender laws, because one can still use cash to pay at some IRS offices, its anti-cash policy is just another tactic in the Federal government’s relentless war to stamp out cash payments." Continue reading

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U.S. Government Watchdog Agency Urges IRS to Intensify Offshore Efforts

"A much larger number of what the IRS calls 'recalcitrant' account-holders chose another route. Instead of entering a voluntary disclosure program, they simply started reporting their foreign accounts, without paying penalties or interest. Such taxpayers avoid paying any delinquent taxes, interest, or penalties, unless audited. Evidence of an explosion in quiet disclosures comes from the fact the number of people filing FBAR forms nearly doubled from 281,000 in 2007 to 516,000 in 2010. The agency has urged the IRS to examine closely these first-time filers for disclosure violations in earlier years. And, the IRS has promised to do just that." Continue reading

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Britain hits offshore gambling industry with 300 million pounds in taxes

"Under rules published on Friday, Britain will tax gambling according to where customers are based rather than where the online operator is registered, meaning that offshore operators pay the same 15% tax rate as domestic companies. The tax will be levied on companies' gross profit in the 2 billion pound remote-gambling market. 'It is unacceptable that gambling companies can avoid UK taxes by moving offshore, and the government is taking decisive action to ensure this can no longer happen,' Economic Secretary to the Treasury Sajid Javid said. 'These reforms will ensure that remote-gambling operators who have UK customers make a fair contribution to the public finances.'" Continue reading

Continue ReadingBritain hits offshore gambling industry with 300 million pounds in taxes