Offshore
World's Biggest Offshore Centre Transmits Two Million Account Details

Switzerland has for the first time transmitted data under the automatic exchange of information regime embracing scores of nations.
Switzerland’s federal tax body has passed over data on about
two million accounts under the global automatic exchange of
information (AEOI) regime set up to stamp out cross-border tax
evasion. This is the first time the country has used this
power.
The exchange involving the Federal Tax
Administration means that the Alpine state, home to around
$2.4 trillion of cross-border money and by far the world’s
largest offshore centre, sent information to most European Union
(with one exception and a delay) and nine other states:
Australia, Canada, Guernsey, Iceland, Isle of Man, Japan, Jersey,
Norway and South Korea.
The data transmission happened at the end of September. The FTA
said it did not send data to Cyprus and Romania because “they do
not yet meet the international requirements on confidentiality
and data security”. (Romania is a EU member state.) The Swiss
organisation said transmission of data to Australia and France is
delayed because of technical issues. The FTA said it has not yet
received data from Croatia, Estonia and Poland. The other partner
states have sent it data, the organisation said in a
statement last Friday.
The global pacts to exchange data, known as the Common
Reporting Standard, came into force and affected a first wave
of countries in 2017, with a second group, including Switzerland,
adopting the system this year. (About 100 jurisdictions in total
are signed up to automatic information exchanges.) The CRS was
introduced as a package of members of the
Organisation of Economic Co-Operation and Development
countries, and others, amid rising concerns about misuse of
offshore centres. Switzerland, for example, has seen its bank
secrecy laws, long a shield against foreign demands for data,
come under assault. The country signed a pact in 2013 with the US
under which scores of Swiss banks entered non-prosecution
agreements and paid fines to draw a line under legal claims about
illegal offshore accounts.
Ironically, the US is not a signatory to the CRS, and the US
enforces tax of expats through the Foreign Account Taxation Act,
aka FATCA, which was enacted initially in 2010. (This situation
has prompted anger about alleged hypocrisy of the US over demands
for potentially sensitive information.)
Switzerland’s FTA said around 7,000 reporting financial
institutions (banks, trusts, insurers and others) are registered
with it and these institutions collected the data and transferred
it to the FTA. The FTA sent information on around 2 million
financial accounts to the partner states and received information
in the millions from them.
Definitive numbers on information received are not yet available.
The FTA cannot provide any information on the amount of financial
assets, it said.
“Identification, account and financial information is exchanged,
including name, address, state of residence and tax
identification number, as well as information concerning the
reporting financial institution, account balance and capital
income,” it said.
“The exchanged information allows the cantonal tax authorities to
verify whether taxpayers have correctly declared their financial
accounts abroad in their tax returns,” it said.
The automatic exchange of information will now happen annually,
the FTA continued. In 2019, data from 2018 will be exchanged with
around 80 partner states, provided these meet the requirements on
confidentiality and data security.
The Common Reporting Standard system has been criticised,
however, because some of the countries involved in the system
might not respect legitimate client confidentiality over data.
One industry figure has branded it a "disaster
waiting to happen".