[Home] [Headlines] [Latest Articles] [Latest Comments] [Post] [Sign-in] [Mail] [Setup] [Help]
Status: Not Logged In; Sign In
Israel/Zionism See other Israel/Zionism Articles Title: War on Money Laundering: Foreign Deposits in Israeli Banks Have Shrunk by Nearly $30 Billion The decline reflects the fear of Israeli banks over tangling with the American authorities The heavy pressure brought to bear by the United States on financial institutions worldwide in its fight against money laundering has changed world banking over the last decade. Discrete tax shelters for wealthy clients who made their fortunes in an ambiguous manner have been required to police their clients and collaborate with the tax authorities, and in fact be agents of change when it comes to undeclared capital worldwide. Israeli banks are not alone in this matter. The Swiss banking industry came first. It had been based on many years of complete discretion, which made Swiss banks the perfect tax shelters. The Israeli banks are under major pressure because of the entanglements of three of them with the U.S. authorities. Leumi has already settled its fines with the American regulators, paying 1.2 billion shekels ($331.9 million), and thats not the end of it. Mizrahi Tefahot had to pay $342 million. But thats not the only change. A look at the deposit files of Israeli banks in Israel and their branches abroad shows that the extent of deposits by foreigners has shrunk by 100 billion shekels in a decade. In 2007, foreigners deposited 201 billion shekels in Israeli banks and their branches abroad, and at the end of 2017, that figure had shrunk to 102 billion shekels. In terms of percentages, deposits by foreigners had shrunk from 26 percent to a mere 7 percent. The sharp decline was by foreign deposits in banks in Israel, which plummeted from 89 billion shekels to 28 billion. The decline reflects the fear of Israeli banks over tangling with the American authorities, because the law obligates them to file reports on their clients and the movements of their money. Identifying clients and the sources of their money has become common practice over the past decade. That is a dramatic change from the past, where banks were a conduit with no questions asked, and certainly no reports filed with the tax authorities. Because of the high fines and uncompromising policies of the U.S. authorities, Israeli banks have adopted a policy of taking no risks in accepting money from unknown sources. The heavy cost just isnt worth it. The Israeli banking industry was based for years on receiving deposits, especially from Jews abroad, which served the Israeli economys foreign currency needs. It was a kind of conspiracy of silence between the governments and the banks. The government didnt ask the banks to be selective about where they got their foreign deposits, either in Israel or abroad, because it served a purpose when Israel was short on foreign currency. Thats not the situation today. Israel has foreign currency reserves of $116 billion as a result of its policy of purchasing dollars from the central bank, and it doesnt need help from the banks, certainly not the kind that would mean huge fines for the banks. This change has led to a number of significant results. For example, Israeli banks have for the most part ended their activities abroad. Leumi shut down its activities in Switzerland, Luxembourg, Latin America, London, Jersey, Kazakhstan and the Cayman Islands, and is in the process of shutting down its branches in Switzerland and Miami. Discount has shut down its branches in Switzerland, London, Latin America and the Cayman Islands. First International has shut down its branches in Switzerland and London, and Mizrahi Tefahot has ceased operations in the Cayman Islands. The U.S. fight against tax evasion puts special obligations on banks worldwide to handle accounts held by U.S. citizens, even when they dont reside there. The U.S. Congress passed the Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act, known as FATCA, in 2010, which obliges non-American financial institutions to do due diligence with their accounts, to identify American account holders and to inform U.S. tax authorities about their accounts or else face a 30% penalty on all receipts of American origin. Other countries have followed, with the OECD developing a system to exchange financial information and the Common Reporting Standard. Israel is the only OECD country that still hasnt passed the needed legislation to adopt this standard. Until it does, Israel will not be able to receive reports by foreign countries about Israeli-held accounts abroad that could be used to evade taxes. This development has made Israeli banks less global and more dependent than ever on Israeli clients. Still, the Americans have managed to change global banking, serving as the main agent of change in the fight against money laundering. Poster Comment: MAGA :) Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread
|
||
[Home]
[Headlines]
[Latest Articles]
[Latest Comments]
[Post]
[Sign-in]
[Mail]
[Setup]
[Help]
|