Russia's presidential executive office has been reviewing the U.S. anti-money laundering act known as FATCA (Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act). Presidential economic advisor Elvira Nabiullina spearheaded a meeting with Finance Ministry, Foreign Ministry, Central Bank, Federal Financial Markets Service, Tax Service and National Payment Council officials, issuing instructions to prepare final proposals within the next two weeks on Russia's negotiating position regarding accession to FATCA, which is expected to come into effect on January 1, 2013.
Fearing that Russian banks might sustain financial or goodwill damage, the National Payment Council addressed a letter to Russia's Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev in June 2012 and requested that he begin developing the FATCA compliance mechanism for Russia. At the meeting initiated by Nabiullina, which came in response to the letter, the council came up with five options for Russia's participation in FATCA.
The first option
envisages an intergovernmental agreement between Russia and the United States,
under which Russian banks will enter into separate agreements with the IRS and
disclose information on U.S. taxpayers directly but in a manner prescribed by
national laws. This model has been adopted in Switzerland and Japan. According
to National Payment Council President Andrei Yemelin, in view of the tight
timeframe, this is the best option, though it is fraught with the risk of
violating bank privacy laws.
The second possible
model also rests on an intergovernmental agreement that would, unlike the
previous option, lay the groundwork for centralized disclosure (this model has
been implemented in France, Great Britain, Germany, Italy, Spain and the Netherlands).
If the model is adopted, banks will be required to submit all relevant
information about U.S. taxpayers to the national regulator, which will then
pass it on to the IRS. In return, the United States pledges to disclose to its
partner nations information about accounts opened with U.S. financial
organizations by their relevant taxpaying residents.
The third option,
strictly in line with U.S. law, also suggests direct agreements between Russian
banks and the IRS, but is even harder on the banks. Aside from reporting to the
U.S. tax authorities, the banks would be under obligation to deduct a
30-percent tax from or even close the accounts of those refusing to cooperate
with the IRS. Yemelin noted that such a scenario, alongside the danger of breaching
bank privacy laws, involves potentially problematic direct debit withdrawals
for the benefit of a foreign government.
According to Yemelin, to
implement any of the three options, additional national laws must be adopted.
The procedure must also be mapped out by October 1, 2012, to followed by an
intergovernmental agreement with the U.S. that must be entered into by January
1, 2013. In addition, banks need to be advised promptly of the particular
compliance mechanism selected, to prevent them from entering into individual
agreements with the IRS.
Any Russian federal law
regulating FATCA compliance must be based on an intergovernmental agreement
with the United States that is in line with the double tax treaty, Yemelin
explained. Meanwhile, the government has not yet selected an exact scenario.
Although the process of developing a FATCA participation mechanism has been
launched, it is proceeding slowly.
"The most favorable
and comfortable scenario for Russia would be to combine options", said
Konstantin Trapaidze, Chairman of the Bar Association Vash Yuridichesky
Poverenny. "First, we have to go with the model used by Switzerland and
Japan ‒ individual agreements ‒ and work by this scheme until an
intergovernmental agreement between Russia and the United States is reached on
centralized transfer of information. Otherwise, the given initiative, which is
so far feeble and unauthorized, will take on an unbalanced character, damaging
Russian banks most of all," Trapaidze said. Meanwhile, the banks will have
to bear the brunt of the accession anyway, head of financial monitoring at SMP
Bank Inga Tumasyeva said: "Either way, the banks will incur material costs
involved in implementing the changes. They have no choice, though, since they
will otherwise become outcasts: compliance with FATCA has been virtually
accepted by the global community."
If you have Unreported Income from Russian Banks or
other Foreign Banks, contact the Tax Lawyers of
Marini & Associates, P.A. for a FREE Tax Consultation at www.TaxAid.us orwww.TaxLaw.ms or Toll Free at 888-8TaxAid (888 882-9243).
If you have Unreported Income from Russian Banks or
other Foreign Banks, contact the Tax Lawyers of
Marini & Associates, P.A. for a FREE Tax Consultation at www.TaxAid.us orwww.TaxLaw.ms or Toll Free at 888-8TaxAid (888 882-9243).
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