Swiss to help IRS
identify secret UBS accounts in tax probe
Friday, June 18, 2010
The Swiss parliament approved a deal Thursday to help the Internal
Revenue Service obtain the names of Americans with secret accounts at
Switzerland's largest bank.
The approval averted a renewed conflict between the U.S. and Swiss
governments over bank secrecy. If the deal had collapsed, Swiss banking
giant UBS faced the threat of potentially crippling U.S. legal action.
Instead, the breakthrough paves the way for the Swiss government to turn
over the names and account details of as many as 4,450 U.S. clients of
UBS suspected of using undeclared accounts to hide income and evade
taxes.
The fate of the international agreement was in limbo during the past
week after the lower house of parliament initially rejected the deal and
tried to put it to a national referendum, which could have delayed
resolution until next year. Lawmakers agreed Thursday not to seek the
referendum.
In ratifying the deal, the parliament in effect gave its blessing to a
weakening of Swiss bank secrecy standards. The issue stirred deep
passions in Switzerland, where bank secrecy is not just a tradition but
one of the keys to the success of the nation's economically important
banking industry. The promise of privacy has helped Switzerland attract
deposits from around the world. The U.S. government's pursuit of tax
dodgers has posed a threat to that system.
UBS acknowledged last year that
it had defrauded the U.S. government by helping Americans hide
money from the IRS. To avert criminal prosecution, it agreed to pay the
U.S. government $780 million.
Separately, the U.S. government pursued a lawsuit against UBS, trying to
compel the bank to hand over details on about 52,000 accounts. UBS said
its hands were tied by Swiss law, and the Swiss government stepped in to
negotiate a solution.
The governments
reached an agreement last August calling for the Swiss to process a
request for details on 4,450 accounts. The deal meant that the Swiss
would consider the request under a more accommodating interpretation of
national law.
Then, early this year, after that process had begun, a Swiss court ruled
that the deal violated national law. The executive branch of the Swiss
government asked the parliament to salvage the agreement by ratifying
it.
The Swiss government has already turned over details on about 500 UBS
clients, the Swiss justice department said Thursday.
Under the agreement, the Swiss tax authority must decide by August
whether the U.S. government is entitled to receive information about
each of the 4,450 accounts. Account holders will be able to appeal those
decisions in Switzerland. |