US Treasury concedes it must reciprocate on FATCA
disclosures
26 January 2012
A senior US Treasury official has admitted
that foreign countries will refuse to cooperate with the Foreign
Account Tax Compliance Act unless US financial institutions
reciprocate by providing them with information about their own
taxpayers.
FATCA was enacted by President Obama in March
2010 and its provisions are now embodied as sections 1471-1474 of
the Internal Revenue Code. It requires foreign financial
institutions (FFIs) to report all their American clients' dealings
to the US Internal Revenue Service, and to withhold payments to
accountholders and to other FFIs according to the IRS's
instructions. Any FFI that refuses will see the IRS impose a 30 per
cent withholding tax on all its remittances from US
investments.
Financial bodies and governments all over the
world have protested at these requirements, partly on grounds of
administrative cost and partly because they require some banks to
breach their own countries' privacy laws.
In a speech to the New York State Bar
Association earlier this week, the Treasury's assistant secretary
for tax policy Emily McMahon conceded that FATCA "imposes
significant new requirements and responsibilities on foreign
financial institutions".
However, she said, sufficient progress had
been made that "FATCA can in fact be implemented in a manner that
is not overly burdensome when compared to its benefits".
"We are proposing a higher threshold for
further investigation into potential US ownership [of bank
accounts]", she said. For new accounts, the checking procedures
required for FATCA purposes will as far as possible match those
already required by anti-money laundering rules.
The Treasury is also planning to expand the
categories of FFIs that it presumes be compliant with FATCA, so as
to focus its attention on higher-risk institutions. There will also
be a temporary moratorium on the rule that a global financial
institution can only be compliant if all of its affiliated firms
are also compliant.
However, McMahon also accepted that some
countries' privacy laws prohibit its banks from complying with
FATCA. One solution to this, she said, is for these countries to
change their laws to suit the US administration's requirements.
As an alternative, the Treasury is suggesting
that financial institutions of a particular country could report
the information required by FATCA to their own government. The
latter would then transmit the information to the IRS under an
extended tax information exchange agreement.
But the US recognises that bilateral solutions
require reciprocity, said McMahon. "We see no principled basis on
which to require that financial institutions based in other
countries collect and provide us with information on US taxpayers,
if we take the position that our own institutions should be exempt
from similar requirements", she said. "To the contrary, we believe
that it will be critical to the success of our efforts to implement
FATCA that we are able to reciprocate."
The Treasury's longer-term goal, she said, is
a more comprehensive multilateral approach to information exchange.
The bilateral agreements that it is now proposing to make FATCA
work would be precursors to that goal.
"For that reason, we believe that FATCA, if
implemented appropriately, can serve as a catalyst for further
advances in the global effort to improve transparency and combat
tax evasion", said McMahon.
Sources
US Department of the Treasury
Toronto Globe and Mail