By GRAHAM BOWLEY
Banks around the world are reeling, and the European banks’ losses are among the most ruinous. And their prestige and putative secrecy and independence received a further blow recently, when the government of Switzerland agreed to release to the United States the names of 4,450 American citizens suspected of using secret Swiss accounts at UBS, the country’s biggest bank, for tax evasion.
But it would be wrong to see the settlement as a strike against just one bank by a single government. It is in fact the result of a broader political moment created in the wake of the global financial crisis when disenchantment with financial globalization is causing governments to repatriate wealth back to within national borders, especially at a time when countries badly need to balance their books.
Just a few years ago, in the pre-crisis era, the shadowy workings of crossborder banking - and what may or may not have been happening there - were generally overlooked.
And, while some of the alleged tax evaders may be the war criminals, gunrunners or despots usually linked with secret foreign bank accounts, the target of the latest efforts are much more likely to include rich businessmen and wealthy individuals.
“There is a political movement because of the financial debacle,” said one veteran European banker who insisted on speaking anonymously because he has retired.
“They are turning toward the socalled rich and want to hurt them.”
Of course, the United States looks at it a bit differently. Prosecutors have contended that in the UBS case alone, wealthy Americans hid billions of dollars, thereby evading taxes of hundreds of millions of dollars a year.
While Switzerland is arguably the largest off-shore center, it is not the only one. Other countries or territories have copied the model - Liechtenstein, Bermuda, the Cayman Islands, Macao and Hong Kong among them. And while Switzerland is probably seen as the most conservative, blue chip, upstanding offshore haven, the others are measured by a sliding scale of probity and association with dubious business practices, if not crime.
The European banker said that in the early 1990s, following the fall of the Soviet Union, he worked in Switzerland where he said agents of Russian expats would show up with “boxes of cash” from Cyprus, a popular haven for capital fleeing the Russian authorities and the country’s post-collapse chaos.
The backlash against this illicit world has not been confined to the United States; it is apparent across Europe, too.
France will become one of the first European countries to put in place a new tax treaty with Switzerland to improve transparency and access to banking information. Germany is in discussions with Liechtenstein over issues related to tax evasion by German companies and individuals. Liechtenstein has also struck a disclosure agreement with Britain, encouraging British clients of Liechtenstein banks to volunteer information to British tax authorities in return for reduced penalties. In Italy, tax officials have started an investigation into whether the estate of the late Gianni Agnelli, the former chairman of Fiat, has money hidden away in Switzerland. In Britain, the government has become particularly exercised by tax competition - the offering of low tax rates and other advantages like tax secrecy to lure capital away.
The Internal Revenue Service commissioner, Doug Schulman, said the agreement with UBS was a “major step forward” in the American government’s efforts to pierce bank secrecy, and he warned that “wealthy Americans who have hidden their money offshore will find themselves in a jam.”
In the new political climate, expect to see a few rich Americans shifting uncomfortably.
UBS, the giant Swiss bank, has agreed to turn over information on American clients suspected of tax evasion.
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