November 5th,
Washington, DC
This RepealFATCA.com bulletin departs from our usual format to round up some important news and commentary from around the world on the deepening troubles of the dysfunctional “Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act” (FATCA). The headlines:
- Treasury Department Promises RepealFATCA.com “Expedited” Response to Freedom of Information Act Request Regarding Agreements with Britain, Canada, and Switzerland.
- Russian Foreign Ministry Affirms Exchange of Tax Information but Rejects FATCA as “Counterproductive,” “Extraterritorial in Nature,” and “Contrary to the Principle of Sovereign Equality.”
- Canadian Opposition and Citizens Take Government and Big Banks to Task for Selling Out on FATCA; Macleans picks up on FATCA.
- Risk.net: “Fatca fears reach swaps market”: Withholding on U.S. Treasury securities could wreak global havoc.
- Rahn: “Looking for lucre in all the wrong places” (Washington Times, 10/28/13).
- Rommann: “FATCA: The Scarlet Letter Abroad” (American Thinker, 11/2/13).
More information on each of the headlines above is provided below:
1. Treasury Department Promises RepealFATCA.com “Expedited” Response to Freedom of Information Act Request Regarding Agreements with Britain, Canada, and Switzerland
The U.S. Treasury Department has informed RepealFATCA.com via letter that our Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) request for departmental records regarding “intergovernmental agreements” (IGAs) with Britain, Canada, and Switzerland has met the legal requirement for “expedited treatment,” and that “every effort” would be made to provide a “timely response.”
Watch this space for further updates!
2. Russian Foreign Ministry Affirms Exchange of Tax Information but Rejects FATCA as “Counterproductive,” “Extraterritorial in Nature,” and “Contrary to the Principle of Sovereign Equality.”
In what may be to date the strongest public statement from any government, the Foreign Ministry of the Russian Federation has released a statement on media reports that Moscow might be close to signing an IGA with the United States to enforce FATCA. While confirming its support for transparency and exchange of tax information on a balanced and mutual basis, the Ministry statement noted (in a report from Russia Behind the Headlines, or in the original Russian from the Ministry):
“’Precisely in this [spirit] do we maintain dialogue with the U.S. administration, arguing that the approaches set forth in the Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act (FATCA) are counterproductive,’ the Russian Foreign Ministry said.
“‘Our position is well known: this law is of exterritorial essence and is at odds with the principle of sovereign equality. It demands that foreign lending-financial institutions comply with American law.’”
Comment by RepealFATCA.com: It is notable that the statement is from the Foreign Ministry, not the Finance Ministry. It seems that in many countries, finance ministries are all-to-ready to accept assurances from their “sister” bureaucracy, the U.S. Treasury Department, that a FATCA IGA is a simple “tax information exchange” commitment. Nothing can be farther from the truth, as FATCA’s intrusive mandates for collecting and reporting private financial data are nowhere authorized under tax treaties. Rather, they are a new set of mutual obligations which, aside from serious privacy and probable cause issues, would require submission to the U.S. Senate for advice and consent as treaties – a path Treasury is not taking.
Also significant is the reference to “the principle of sovereign equality” Enshrined and legally binding on all Member States under Article 2.1 of the United Nations Charter (“1. The Organization is based on the principle of the sovereign equality of all its Members.”), FATCA’s demand to enforce America law on an extraterritorial basis on firms not under U.S. jurisdiction is a fatal flaw under international jurisprudence.
In its statement, the Russian Foreign Ministry also insists that any agreement (if there is one, which would exclude the “one size fits all” IGA text currently being presented on a take-it-or-leave-it basis) “must comply with the generally accepted international standards and guarantee a reliable protection to our financial institutions.”
It remains to be seen what steps Moscow might be willing to take if in the absence of an IGA Russian banks and other financial institutions are threatened with a 30% withholding of U.S.-derived revenues, which “accepted international standards” would have the character of an illegal sanction.
The Russian position should be a model for other countries. As one active participant of the Isaac Brock Society has written to Canadian officials:
“Please note in the following news item today, that Russia has made it very clear that any agreement between the US and Russia over FATCA must be fully reciprocal and must respect Russian sovereignty. The statement also mentions that FATCA as currently formulated is an extraterritorial violation of the sovereign equality of other countries.
“It would be utterly unacceptable for Canada to accept or insist on less than what Russia does, in any agreement with the US over FATCA. As it is highly unlikely the US can respect or even get full reciprocity, which would require US Senate approval not yet forthcoming in even one IGA the US has signed, I think the most rational approach for Canada to take is to walk away from negotiations with the US over this, to insist on Canadian financial institutional compliance with current Canadian law and our Charter of Rights and Freedoms, and to contemplate protections or retaliatory sanctions against the US should it ever actually enforce the threatened sanctions against Canadian financial institutions that have branches in the US.
“Canada’s sovereignty is no less important than Russia’s, and I expect that my government will stand up for Canadians as forthrightly as the Russian government does for its own citizens and sovereignty. It would be a very sad, pathetic commentary on any Canadian government that would not do so.”
3. Canadian Opposition and Citizens Take Government and Big Banks to Task for Selling Out on FATCA
In more news from the “True North strong and free,” Canadian citizens have submitted a petition toLiberal MP Ted Hsu, who has already submitted his own blistering set of questions to the Conservative government of Prime Minister Stephen Harper and Finance Minister Jim Flaherty. Hsu has been seconded by his Liberal colleague and his party’s Finance Critic (a/k/a Shadow Minister) Scott Brison, whose inquiry includes what one would expect would be the first question any country would ask itself before knuckling under to the costly demands of a foreign state:
“[H]as the government assessed the possibility of not acceding to FATCA in any way and, if so, with what conclusion and with what cost to Canada or to Canadians when compared to accession[?]” (Appears as “(dd)” in the orginal list at the link.)
Canadians’ awareness of the threat FATCA presents to their civil rights and their country’s sovereignty received a major boost recently with the October 31 publication in Macleans, the nation’s premier news magazine, of “What’s FATCA? The IRS peeking into Canadians’ bank accounts,” by Erica Alini.
The text of the citizens’ petition follows (again from the Isaac Brock Society):
Petition to Canadian Government re: Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act (FATCA) in Canada
Whereas the United States is demanding that Canadian financial institutions provide to the United States Treasury and United States Internal Revenue Service comprehensive and confidential financial information on “US persons” who are Canadian citizens and residents;
And
Whereas Canadian Bankers Association has advised that they may comply with FATCA, including possible closure of bank accounts of Canadian citizens and residents who refuse to consent to information being provided to US Treasury and IRS;
And
Whereas FATCA is a foreign law that violates Canada’s sovereignty;
And
Whereas the term “U.S. person” has no legal meaning in Canada;
And
Whereas FATCA violates Canada’s Bank Act, Personal Information Protection and Electronics Documents Act (PIPEDA) and Canadian Human Rights Code;
And
Whereas compliance with FATCA would violate Canada’s Charter of Rights and Freedoms;
Therefore, we request the Canadian government to:
1. Immediately assure Canadian citizens and residents that all Canadian citizens and residents have the same rights to privacy in managing their financial affairs.
2. Advise Canadian financial institutions that they must comply with Canadian laws.
3. Assure Canadian citizens and residents that those Canadian laws and the Charter of Rights and Freedoms will not be changed for FATCA.
4. Cease negotiating with the United States on any agreement to implement FATCA that will contradict Canada’s Charter, its current banking, privacy and human rights laws and the current Canada-US Tax Treaty.
4. Risk.net: “Fatca fears reach swaps market”: Withholding on Treasury securities could wreak global havoc.
Having narrowly averted a potential global financial crisis triggered by a U.S. debt default (and maybe awaiting a reprise in January 2014), how many people anticipate the U.S. government might spark a crisis of confidence in American creditworthiness by deliberately withholding a portion of the legally due payments on part of the U.S. debt?
But that’s exactly what the Treasury Department would do under the 30% “withholding” of payments to “recalcitrant” foreign institutions. One shudders to think what the impact could be on the marketability of U.S. securities and interest rates. Even a minor upward blip of the rate the United States pays on our massive debt would more than wipe out the meager gain (less than one billion per year) FATCA supposedly would “recover.”
As glimpse into uncertainty and complexity of the mechanics of withholding payment on U.S. securities is provided by Matt Cameron writing in the UK-based Risk.net (excerpts below, link to full text here (by subscription)):
“Swap counterparties could be caught in the crossfire of controversial new US tax rules – possibly facing a nasty hit – when they come into force next year,” lawyers say.
[ . . . ]
“To give an example, if a Fatca-compliant FFI [foreign financial institution] receives US Treasury bonds as collateral on an in-the-money swap from a non-participating FFI counterparty, then the compliant firm is expected to pass any interest on the bonds back to the counterparty.
“However, the interest would be subject to the withholding tax, as the non-compliant counterparty is considered to be the beneficial owner of the bond. Essentially, the compliant collateral receiver would be left with just 70% of the interest, but would be required under the terms of the collateral agreement to pay 100% to its non-compliant counterparty, leaving it out of pocket.
“Lawyers say many firms are not aware of these implications, and the situation becomes even more complicated if the counterparties are using an English-law credit support annex (CSA). The document operates on the basis of title transfer, which means full ownership of the asset is passed to the collateral receiver. That party is free to rehypothecate the asset, and only has to pay an amount equal to the coupons received on the asset and return a similar, fungible security back to the poster when required. That raises doubts over whether the non-compliant collateral poster would still be considered the beneficial owner of the US Treasury collateral.
[ . . . ]
“The Fatca rules do provide some relief for swaps and collateral agreements that are outstanding as of July 1 next year. But the collateral backing the grandfathered trades needs to be split from the assets securing non-grandfathered transactions. In other words, if a pool of collateral backs both pre- and post-July 1 trades, then the counterparty must allocate each security to specific collateralised transactions – an unmanageable requirement, lawyers say.”
5. Rahn: “Looking for lucre in all the wrong places” (Washington Times, 10/28/13)
Richard W. Rahn, senior fellow at the Cato Institute and chairman of the Institute for Global Economic Growth, comments (excerpts below, link to full text here):
“The Obama administration has performed the unique trick of alienating the majority of our most important allies, while at the same time causing America to be viewed as a patsy by its enemies.
“The situation is bound to get worse now that the administration has taken the position that most financial institutions outside the United States are conspiring to help Americans and others avoid U.S. taxes and, thus, is attempting to require all of these foreign financial institutions to report to — and, in effect, become agents of — the Internal Revenue Service. A global revolt is brewing against the United States for being an international financial bully. The consequences of this revolt are likely to be extremely damaging and long-lasting to the nation.
“The administration has managed to cause serious damage to relations with our major allies over spying on them, acting as a financial imperialist and being perceived as an unreliable partner.
[ . . . ]
“The latest outrage is the Treasury Department’s Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act, which, in essence, demands that all foreign financial institutions prove that they have no U.S. clients or ‘tax persons.’ If they do, however, they must collect taxes from them for the IRS. This is, of course, an impossible task for any financial institution in a world of dual citizenships and work permits. The cost of compliance for foreign financial institutions is huge. Estimates run in tens of billions of dollars, yet the Congressional Budget Office estimates that the regulation will only bring $892 million per year into the U.S. Treasury. The proposed regulations are making it very difficult, if not almost impossible, for Americans living abroad to open bank accounts. The U.S. Treasury recently issued a ‘fact sheet’ on the tax-compliance act, totally unsupported, not surprisingly, by actual facts, since the Treasury never did a cost-benefit analysis. In response, a spokesman for American Citizens Abroad stated, ‘I am not only outraged, but absolutely astounded, that Treasury would issue such a statement of deliberately misleading lies.’ Of course, this same administration falsely told Americans they could keep their current health insurance and doctor under Obamacare.
“Only nine countries have signed the intergovernmental agreement with Treasury to implement the Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act. Without a large number of countries signing on, the regulation will be impossible to enforce. Switzerland is one of the countries that signed on, but now there is a pushback among Swiss citizens who are unhappy with their government’s acquiescence. They’re now collecting signatures for a referendum to overturn the agreement (which is allowed under Swiss law). If the tax-compliance act is overturned, is the U.S. government going to fine or jail Swiss bankers who come to this country for not following IRSregulations when their own Swiss citizens have instructed them not to? Foreign financial executives have already been warned by some of their own governments not to travel to the United States. If the administration persists with the Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act and the prosecution of foreign financial executives, it is in danger of having them pull out trillions of dollars of foreign investment, which would be a disaster for the U.S. economy and would likely cause a new global recession, or worse.
“The administration has the unmitigated gall to insult others by assuring foreign governments that all the sensitive financial information collected will be kept confidential. If theadministration continues on this reckless and irresponsible course, the next president of the United States may well be forced to make an “apology” tour to most of the world’s countries for wrecking the world economy.”
6. Rommann: “FATCA: The Scarlet Letter Abroad” (American Thinker, 11/2/13).
Ryan Rommann, who writes on tax and economic policy for Healy Consultants (Singapore), comments on the human and economic cost of FATCA (excerpts below, link to full text here):
“I am a U.S. citizen living and working abroad. I have always been an upstanding, taxpaying American. I served in the Peace Corps and donate my time to community service. Never have I attempted to pay less than my fair share of taxes nor tried to hide in offshore tax havens. Yet I, and the 7.2 million Americans currently overseas, am being blacklisted by a little-known tax policy.
[ . . . ]
“FATCA is making it increasingly difficult to open personal bank accounts. Major banks such as HSBC, Deutsche Bank, DBS, and UBS have admitted to turning away holders of American passports. If you are an American living or working in Switzerland, for example, you can say ‘goodbye’ to innocent until proven guilty. The default bank response will be to assume you are Al Capone, because actually trusting an American client could elicit a hefty IRS fine in the future.
“The same applies for small businesses. Corporate bank accounts for U.S.-owned foreign companies face stiffer ‘Know Your Customer’ hurdles and paperwork. FFIs will have to form dedicated teams simply to navigate the new FATCA compliance, according to Bank of SingaporeCEO Renato De Guzman. Minimum deposits and bank fees are increasing to cover the cost of complying with FATCA. Small businesses are forced to deposit minimums upwards of $100,000 and pay higher monthly maintenance fees. Foreign banks simply don’t want the hassle of playing freelance IRS agents.
[ . . . ]
“Perhaps even worse than FFIs refusing U.S. clients, foreign banks may eventually divest from the U.S. market for fear of being taxed an extra 30%. Capital flight would be one more burden on an already tepid U.S. economic recovery. Meanwhile, the law would only raise a paltry $800 million per year, less than 1 percent of the $100 billion claimed to be lost each year to tax evasion according to Centre for Freedom and Prosperity’s Andrew Quinlan. This gap in revenue is likely due to tax evaders’ ability to remain hidden through layered corporate structures, nominee shareholders and trust agreements. The fact is that law-abiding citizens will forfeit privacy, while money launders and terrorists will manage to stay invisible.
“The legislation is simply un-American. Recent NSA spying allegations aside, privacy has always been protected for U.S. citizens. Yet FATCA affords no financial privacy. It requires banks to report back to the IRS account numbers, names, addresses, balances, and transactions. Why should foreign banks be expected to trust U.S. citizens when even their own government does not extend the same faith? And imagine if this disclosure requirement was applied by other nations. Would America’s banks really be comfortable reporting back to Mexico, China, or Russia the financial portfolios of the 11 million immigrants living in the U.S.?
“The Romans had a phrase — civis romanus sum — to describe the far-reaching protection of the empire. A Roman citizen could travel the globe and be afforded the same status and rights as those of home, merely by proclaiming his citizenship. FATCA is the exact opposite. Financial institutions now view me as a potential fraudster and troublesome American. American citizenship should always be a badge of honor, but FATCA is making it a scarlet letter.”
James George Jatras
Editor, RepealFATCA.com
++++++++++++++
Contact RepealFATCA.com and find out how you can help get rid of “the worst law most Americans have never heard of”!
Email: RepealFATCA@gmail.com or jim@globalstrategicpr.com
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Phone: +1.202.375.1007
www.RepealFATCA.com
James – as always, thank you for this. Regrettably, for us living overseas, it is only getting worse every day due to FATCA, and the Treasury seems not to care one iota, and continues to force a square peg in a round hole. What Treasury SHOULD do, if those in charge really had US Citizens’ best interests in mind, is to go back to Congress and admit FATCA is not working/not the right solution and ask for needed changes like the elimination of citizenship based taxation in favor of residence based taxation. Clearly, that has not happened and is unlikely to happen.
@Steve Klaus…
I don’t have time for a separate post today, but have you seen this from American Citizens Abroad…??
Same-Country Exception?
They are taking a different tack. Trying to get an exemption since Treasury can’t / won’t do anything about Citizenship taxation, but they could make this exemption if they wanted to…
They have the discretionary power. This kinda puts them on record of not giving a “S*%#! about Expats if they do nothing. They give exemptions to a lot of other things in those Annexes, so why not a same country exception if FATCA was REALLY about homeland tax evasion?
ACA has a proposal submitted to exclude those living outside the U.S. long term legitimately. Not RBT exactly but, a way to tweak FATCA so as to not harass and criminalize every single long term expat.
The damage is being done right now. It’s not even implemented in most places yet and it’s causing huge problems. Why can’t they take it back and adjust it, amend? When this thing gets going I can’t imagine the fall out. Horrible. Thanks for this round up.
It’s only going to come to a head when other countries start objecting when they realise what has been imposed upon them and balk.
I wrote a letter to ACA asking them to clarify a few things they have in their proposal. I don’t see how exempting non-residents is feasible. I wrote:
“If I’m reading your letter correctly, you are asking the IRS and Treasury not to pursue any US persons legitimately living abroad in order to discourage FFI’s from retaliating against them. The IRS and Treasury are aware that there are a vast number of US persons living abroad who are not US tax compliant. Many of these account holders will be determined to have US tax liabilities. Unfortunately under your plan, the FFI’s will still have to go on an account by account basis to determine whether that account holder is US tax compliant in order to exempt those who are. Just as the IRS isn’t interested in those with <$50K in the bank, the IRS isn't really interested in those who are non-resident and tax compliant, although they are interested in us to the degree that they wouldn't grant us anything that would in the process allow others to remain non-compliant."
Also concerning residency, and the taxpayer being allowed to remain in the US for less than 183 days a year in order to be exempt:
"Is your suggestion that the exception apply only if the taxpayer doesn't reside in the US for more than 183 days a year based on the substantial presence test? If so, in order to not be considered a US taxpayer under the substantial presence test, the IRS allows the non-resident to add the number of days they were in the U.S. during the current year to one third of their total U.S. days in the previous year and one sixth of their U.S. days the year before that. If the total is less than 183 days, generally residency isn’t established."
@just me: yes thanks I did read the ACA letter. My initial thought was anything is better than nothing. The proposal invites a no brain response from Treasury that so called everyday expats already get the benefit of the exemptions in the FATCA rules- what is always in Treasurys narrow mind is how they can’t let the Rich (as they define it) move overseas and not pay ‘their fair share’. The ACA proposal would help a US person resident in Singapore with Singapore accounts but not a US Person living in Jakarta who for safety and security also has a bank account in Singapore. The reality is much more complex than the simple ACA proposal. One can only hope for some sanity .
The only long term solution is the adoption of resident based taxation.
Bubblebulstin, Residence based taxation will never be enacted by Congress, which is totally dysfunctional right now. There is no incentive after all us “overseas” have no representation. That is why I renounced and my cat meows at 10:30 pm. I am awaiting my CLN.
“Withholding on Treasury securities could wreak global havoc.” The text is quite complex gobblydygook. It would be nice to hear examples of the havoc anticipated and related to FATCA. THen it can be used as a discussion Point.
The ACA proposal is part of a 2 pronged effort of solving the real issue and trying to put bandaids on the hemoraging. The concept of EU and EES is supposed to be freedom of movement, and even the EU and EES cannot accomplish that for itself yet—allowing its Citizens to have bank accounts wherever they work & love and want to invest inside of EU.
The proposal should be widened to include the ability to save anywhere within your home EEU/EES or previous home location.
A good effort—can’t complain too much about something that is better than bad.
@kermitzii -agree that only LT solution is RBT per bubblebustin….but also agree with you, Kermitzi. it ain’t gonna happen. I am planning to tattoo my CLN number on my hip surrounded by roses. that way I will never forget it !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
to paraphrase Ryan Rommann ‘s wonderful article in “American thinker” 2 Nov 2013
“American civis ego foris, et ideo subiectum gentis origine discrimine”
Brockers rock!
I have been reading an excellent book by Erik Larson called “In the Garden of Beasts” about the US Ambassador to Berlin during Hitler’s rise to absolute power. I am embarrassed and dispirited by this, but the following sentence about the position of the Jews in Germany at that time immediately made me think about FATCA: “A large rubber company was told it must provide proof that it had no Jewish employees before it could submit bids to municipalities.”
@Just Me and James : excellent post, very in depth and full of information.
Thanks for heads up on ACA letter. Their idea is helpful but time will tell if congress will be smart and willing enough to change FATCA.
@qm: thanks for bringing up the book “In The Garden Of Beasts”. I will order the book. Tom Hanks is planning to make the movie. I have a deep interest in the Jewish peoples history, since following the Eichman trial in 1961. I was 14 and it left a deep imprint on my soul. I suspect I have Jewish genes but my grandparents came from Poland around 1916 to settle in usa. I believe they had Jewish relatives left in Poland. That trial and the Movie “On The Beach” which came out 1959 profoundly left an impression on me.
I read in the 1980s None Is Too Many: Canada and the jews of Europe 1933 – 1948. That too sticks on mind forever. FATCA has made feel like the Jewish people in those times. It is wrong and evil.
@Crystal in London
Great idea of getting a tattoo of CLN. I have no Tattoos but that one would be truly significant for me.
I normally disapprove of tattoos given that I despise needles and am a pain wimp to the utmost degree. However, getting a tattoo of my CLN number appeals to me for so many reasons. A badge of honour. A testament to what I was literally forced to do because of the U.S. treating my family like criminals, a way to blatantly state I’m not one of “them” to my bank and fantastic way to make a statement to all of the above.
I’m half way laughing at this and …..also considering it. LOL!
@ALL
How many digits in a cln?
But, is there a CLN number — none shows on mine? I think this lack of numbering on CLN’s is one excuse the Department of State gives for not being able to give a number of “HOW MANY?” and its discrepancies with FBI numbers.
@Atticus, How’s about ‘Owned by USA’ with a red X over it, followed by your CLN #’?
I prefer all my scars to be only emotional.
@Calgary, I don’t have mine yet as I relinquished at the end of Sept. and they are “so backed up with these” there is no telling how long it will be before mine arrives.
@White Kat….no way! I relinquished because I did feel “owned” and didn’t like it one bit. Nobody owns me not even Canada. My contract with Canada is to participate in being a good citizen. The U.S. didn’t see things that way and we had a parting of the ways. That word “owned” *shudder!*
Maybe just a crest emblem from my Canadian citizenship certificate.
@ Atticus
Owned and compliance, both make me shudder. How about CLN & FREE?
@Atticus..
I relinquished when I became a citizen because I thought I am to stay so I want to do my civic duty and be a citizen. I never had any intention to return to live in the USA. There was no need, no desire. The country does not think like me. I am a Canadian in my heart and beliefs.
I thought of the tatoo some more. A maple leaf with Glorious and Free in script.
@ Brockers on the Tattoo idea. I am going to Trademark my idea and Claim IP rights…. you guys are inspiring. it won’t just be a CLN number on my hip, it will be CLN number over stylised union Jack both above “Owned by USA’ with a red X over it,” next to a USD Bill with “monopoly” on the USD Bill
FANTASTIC! 🙂
@ crystal london
LOL! That’s gonna hurt, a lot. 😉
northernstar, I actually am thinking of a maple leaf tattoo to celebrate my citizenship once the day comes. Someone in my yoga class has a maple leaf tat that is just beautiful. I think I might put it on my wrist.
My husband thinks I am a little crazy for wanting a tat at all, but when I look around me, everyone has one. Young or old. Canadians are big on self-decoration. It almost seems unCanadian to not have one.
@crystal london
tatoo sound big.I am a little confused visualizing it.
@Em
sounds like a nice tatoo….small
which is what I want.
My friend has at least 5 small one I have always been chicken.
I thought of putting on a small peace sign in a daisy , a 2 tear drops with each having the initials of my son and husband.
Maybe getting my maple leaf will lead on to the others.