With new international data-exchange agreements in place, the United Kingdom will soon have greater access than ever to information on tax dodgers with offshore accounts, according to the nation's Financial Secretary to the Treasury David Gauke.
The price tag financial institutions will face implementing a newly-endorsed intergovernmental plan to fight tax evasion will be high despite their recent investments to comply with similar American demands.
Representatives from 51 jurisdictions Wednesday formalized their commitment to automatically exchange data starting in 2017 and 2018 as part of a global effort to limit tax evasion.
Thirty-four nations disclosed a finalized model plan Monday to regularly share financial data for tax enforcement purposes as part of a broader crackdown on tax dodgers and offshore jurisdictions.
An influential Senate subcommittee will hear testimony on tax evasion through offshore banks, Switzerland agrees to follow automatic data exchange standards and more, in this week's news roundup.
The U.S. Justice Department seizes digital funds tied to an Internet black market, Republicans line up behind effort to fight FATCA and more, in this week's news roundup.
China prohibits the trading of bitcoins by financial institutions over money laundering concerns, the U.K. closes 100 suspicious Bank of Cyprus accounts, and more, in this week's news roundup.
A new IRS division focusing on recovering lost tax revenue from the ultra-wealthy has begun auditing individuals, according to a corporate tax attorney at a Washington, D.C. law firm.
Many tax havens have done the bare minimum to remove themselves from an intergovernmental group's list of regulatory-lax jurisdictions, at times only signing tax treaties with other bank secrecy countries.
The chairmen of the Senate Finance and House Ways and Means committees unveiled legislation Tuesday designed to help the I.R.S. find tax evaders with assets housed in offshore jurisdictions.
Bank secrecy jurisdictions have lobbied behind the scenes to weaken a United Nations call for greater international cooperation on tax evasion expected to be issued this week, say tax policy analysts.
Evaluating the effects of the global recession and bank secrecy laws on anti-money laundering efforts will be among the priorities of the new president of the Financial Action Task Force.
The Obama administration's plans to curb foreign institutions from aiding U.S. tax evaders is short on details, but could block U.S. citizens and residents' access to foreign banks and put a new compliance burden on U.S. institutions, say some tax professionals.
The United Kingdom's chief tax authority is compiling a publicly available list to shame British citizens who avoid paying taxes on more than 25,000 pounds of income, the agency disclosed Wednesday.
Financial regulation is in the early stages of undergoing its biggest change since the passage of the U.S. Patriot Act, according to Mike Flowers, a former counsel for the U.S. Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations.
Five bank secrecy jurisdictions have acquiesced since Thursday to international calls for them to loosen privacy rules that allow tax evaders to hide their assets from governments, according to tax consultants and media reports.
International pressure on bank secrecy havens, including Switzerland and Lichtenstein, is prompting tax evaders to move their assets to Middle Eastern and Asian countries, say economic analysts.
Switzerland's largest bank disputed claims Wednesday that it was balking at U.S. demands for information on 52,000 undeclared accounts suspected to belong to tax evaders.
A Lichtenstein bank accused by U.S. lawmakers of aiding tax evaders could face sanctions on the heels of a nearly $800 million penalty against UBS AG, according to banking consultants.
Switzerland's largest bank will pay $780 million to the United States for helping 17,000 U.S. citizens evade paying taxes on offshore revenue, the U.S. Justice Department said Wednesday.