Swiss Bank Accounts:
The US
and Indian Approach
Arun Kumar.
CESP,SSS,JNU
The Tribune, August 28, 2009
Money from
criminal activities maybe routed to these accounts via shell companies or dummy
companies - money laundering. Money is transferred from one account to the
other and the previous account is closed and so on so that it becomes difficult
to trace where the money originated from. Such activity is facilitated by
bankers themselves, by legal firms and chartered accountants firms operating in
tax havens. To make the task of tracing the origin of the money more difficult,
money is sent from one shell company in one tax haven to another in a different
country (as in the case of Bofors). Major banks facilitate such activities
apparently by maintaining hundreds of companies in tax havens. Given this
complexity and difficulty in tracing individuals who are evading taxes, how did
the US succeed in extracting
a concession from the UBS bank of Switzerland ?
The short
answer is hard work by IRS (the US
government tax department) and the clout enjoyed by the US in world
affairs. The story begins in mid 2008 with the indictment of Mr. Bradely
Birkenfeld. He was a private banker acting on behalf of Swiss Banks. He
accepted that he was servicing clients of these banks in the USA . This was
illegal for a variety of reasons including encouraging the clients to violate US tax laws.
In the year
2000, IRS established the Qualified Intermediary (Q.I.) programme which
required foreign banks to get US entities who wee their clients to file various
forms to show their incomes. To overcome the consequent difficulty, the Swiss
banks found ways of hiding the identity of the true owners of accounts with
them through shell companies in other tax havens. Mr. Birkenfeld according to
the court papers helped in facilitating all this, moving assets (like, bringing
diamonds in a toothpaste tube), issue of credit cards for facilitating use of
funds, showing money transferred to clients as loans by Swiss banks and so on.
He accepted helping a real estate developer evade $7.2 million in tax and
hiding assets worth $200 million. Mr. Birkenfeld was apparently one of the many
private bankers used by the Swiss and others to get business from wealthy US clients.
Since UBS’s
name cropped up, the US government
next charged a top UBS executive of helping 20,000 US
individuals hide $ 20 billion from the US government. As the case
progressed the entire UBS bank was threatened with indictment. To stave off
prosecution, UBS in February 2009 agreed to pay the US
government $780 million and reveal the names of 200 to 300 US citizens holding
secret accounts.
The US government next
filed a case to get the names of an estimated 52,000 wealthy individuals who
have accounts in UBS. The Swiss tried every trick in the trade to stall, like, saying
this would lead to a diplomatic row or it would threaten the stability of the
financial system in the world and so on. The US
judge went to the extent of asking the US government whether it was
willing to seize the assets of UBS and put them under another management. The Bank
argued that revealing the names would be violative of Swiss criminal law.
The US government announced
a voluntary disclosure scheme which allowed people with illegal accounts abroad
to come clean by paying their taxes due and accepting light penalty. However,
the judge did not consider this adequate and maintained pressure on UBS. Given UBS’s
large operations in the US
and the revelations being made by those using voluntary disclosure, it had to give
in. An agreement was signed last week to give the US government between 4 to 5,000
names. The details are not fully available but perhaps the biggest tax evaders
who most likely have operations in many tax havens have already shifted funds
out of not just UBS but out of Switzerland
(there have been reports to this affect).
In the US , as more and
more data is coming to light, prosecution is accelerating. On the basis of
revelations, Mr. Schumacher and Mr. Rickenbach have been indicted on August 20,
2009 in Florida
on grounds of helping US entities to hide assets and evade taxes. Jeffrey
Chernick, John McCarthy and individuals referred to as J.E. and E.D. are
mentioned in the indictment as those receiving ‘help’ from these gentlemen. The
pace of prosecution is likely to increase as more data becomes available
through voluntary disclosure and revelation of names by Swiss banks.
In India ’s case,
when some information is received, it is suppressed or the investigating
agencies spoil the case so that prosecution is rare. From time to time,
information does become available, like, in the case of Jain Havala or Bofors
but this has never been systematically pursued or the case has been weakened.
In India
the rich and powerful have the clout to prevent justice from being done. In the
advanced countries this seems to be far less.
A perusal
of the revelations in the US show that banks with operations in tax havens or
originating in tax havens are indulging in all manner of fraud in other
countries. In India (given
our laxity) they would be doing at least as much as has been revealed in the US . Given this,
the least the Indian Government should do is to tighten control over such banks
operating here. Further, all foreign banks should be made to give undertakings along
the lines of Q.I programme. They must also be asked to give information about
their subsidiaries and operations in tax havens so that their operations become
transparent.
While the
black economy in the US maybe
larger in absolute amount, as a per cent of its GDP, it is small (5%) compared
to that of India
(about 50%). Thus, India
is losing far more due to the adverse impact of the black economy. Further, the
US receives funds from all
over the world given its lucrativeness but India loses capital. So, a country
that is short of capital has been exporting capital to the tax havens and the
rich countries. Every time there is demand to unearth funds lying abroad there
is a chorus, obviously orchestrated by the wealthy, that this would be futile. So,
while we need to do more to tackle the menace we do far less than we can or
what the other countries are doing.