We have been following the New Zealand FATCA IGA developments via several IBS threads. Many of these are listed here for your historical reference.
Much of the information has been provided to us by Kiwi Osgood who comments here on IBS from time to time. We are indebted to him for his dogged pursuit of this issue where FATCA is even less known than it is in America or Canada. Although some Americans must be getting the word, as Phil Hogden reports increased renunciation activity in Auckland.
Osgood has been diligently communicating with the IRD and NZ Revenue Minister, as their ‘FATCA working group’ is doing the negotiation with U.S. Treasury. He has now completed an analysis of the legislation over the Christmas holidays (rotten way to spend a vacation) which will follow after the jump.
In summary he says of the Stealth:
The conclusion is depressing. I think I now see why they are putting the legislation through before the IGA has been signed. The legislation is generic and simply compels NZFIs to comply with “foreign account information sharing agreements”. The contents of those agreements are not considered by the legislation. Essentially the IGAs can be signed by cabinet without further legislation. As the US IGA is still “under negotiation” a casual observer may assume that the contents are still being worked out, but as we know that is not the case. How many people will actually bother to go and look at the Model 1 IGA and look at the detail? It is all quite clever and deceitful.
Read the complete analysis below:
New Zealand has introduced proposed legislation to compel New Zealand Financial Institutions (NZFIs) to comply with an IGA for FATCA. This is unusual as the proposed IGA has not yet been signed, although the legislation assumes that this will occur in the near future.
The legislation has been introduced to the NZ Parliament by the Minister of Revenue on 22 Nov 2013. The Policy and Strategy has been developed by the New Zealand Inland Revenue Department (IRD). The bill had its first reading (debate) on 10 Dec 2013. The bill was referred to a Select Committee for review. Public submissions are invited and are due by 5th February 2014. Submissions can be made online here (click the box “Make an online submission” at the foot of the page).
The legislation is included in an innocuous sounding omnibus tax bill entitled “Taxation (Annual Rates, Employee Allowances, and Remedial Matters) Bill”. The Section dealing with the IGA/FATCA is named “Foreign account information-sharing agreement”. The legislation attempts to make the provisions generic in case future information-sharing agreements are entered into, although the motivation is clearly to change NZ domestic laws to force NZFI to comply with the upcoming FATCA IGA with the US.
At the time of introduction of the bill, the government also released the following documents:
Media Statement
Commentary on the Bill
Regulatory Impact Statement (RIS)
The media statement is of little interest, and the bill and commentary are highly technical. Anyone wishing to read about the provisions in more detail should begin with the RIS.
The RIS essentially describes the analysis that was performed by IRD prior to creating the proposed legislation.
In summary, the RIS assumes that the decision to sign the IGA has already been taken and then examines the options available based on that assumption. The options considered are as follows:
1. Whether to introduce legislation or not (Status quo or Legislation)
2. If legislation is to be introduced, should it be prescriptive (reproduce the IGA in domestic legislation), or broad (refer to the IGA)
Their preferred option is to introduce legislation and that it should be broad. In other words, the legislation will only refer to the IGA, it will not specify the terms in specific legislation.
I have reviewed the RIS and here are the main points that I have noted (in no particular sequence):
1. There has been no public consultation, but “the financial services sector has been actively engaged”, as have other government departments. This has been on-going for over 12 months prior to the introduction of this bill. Not only has the FATCA legislation been “smuggled” into a bill containing unrelated legislation, the period of public consultation is just a few weeks, during which most of New Zealand is on holiday. Clearly the government wants as little visibility of this as possible. (This is how NZ does stealth!)
2. IGA Decision has been made! According to the RIS “The Cabinet decision to enter into IGA negotiations has already been made” and “will be subject to scrutiny in the appropriate manner”, whatever that means. What then, is the point of this public consultation? If an IGA is signed they will obviously need to introduce legislation to override NZ Privacy laws otherwise the NZFI could not comply. That is the primary purpose of the IGA. It is the IGA itself that should be the subject of consultation, not the enabling legislation!
3. No Cost Benefit analysis: They state (point 18) that “Inland Revenue does not consider it is possible to estimate the fiscal costs/benefits of entering into an IGA with the United States”. They also state (on page 1) that “We do however note that the economic costs of not enacting the legislation proposed are unable to be accurately estimated” followed by (also on Page 1) “any fiscal gains from the reciprocal nature of any IGA cannot currently be estimated”. In other words, they have no clue of either the cost or benefit of taking any particular course of action, further stating “it is concluded that the benefits of enacting this legislation greatly outweigh the costs”. On what basis, and who came to this conclusion?
4. Unknown Compliance Costs: It is recognised that there will be “some compliance costs” for NZFI (Page 10, point 34), but these will be “considerably less than they would be if no enabling legislation were introduced”. Really? Why can no firm numbers be put on these costs?
5. IRD Systems Implications: They recognize the “systems implications” for IRD (Page 10, point 35) and that they are preparing a business case for funding “this initiative for consideration by Cabinet”. They estimate a cost of only $5.6-$8.5 million over the entire [life cycle of this agreement]. Considering the costs of issuing guidance, developing new IT systems to cater for receipt and transmission of data, dealing with the inevitable continual change to the regulations, [new administrative staff], this seems ridiculously low.
6. Impairment of Privacy Rights: The agency disclosure statement admits that the proposed option “will impair the privacy rights of the customers concerned” and that “the legislation will enable discrimination against this group” [United States Taxpayers]. Page 6 contains the statement “Domestic legislation can over-ride the Privacy Act, Human Rights Act and New Zealand Bill of Rights Act to the extent it is inconsistent with those acts”. Apparently (Page 1), “the proposals have been discussed with the Office of the Privacy Commissioner and the Ministry of Justice, both of whom understand the need for legislation in this instance”. Is it not an outrage that the government itself is prepared to enact legislation to override these provisions at the behest of a foreign government?
7. No determination of number of Kiwis impacted: There is no reference anywhere to any analysis performed on the number of New Zealanders that will be affected because they are “deemed US Persons”. Why was this not performed to understand the numbers impacted?
8. New Zealand accepts U.S. Citizenship dominance over Kiwi citizens: Following on from similar previous comments made by the Minister and IRD in correspondence, the RIS continues to present the position that the persons affected are “US persons that are also New Zealand residents” or “United States taxpayers that are resident in New Zealand”. There is no acknowledgement that the majority of those affected are New Zealand Citizens; in fact, they refuse to use the term ‘New Zealander’ or ‘New Zealand Citizen’ in any of the documents or correspondence. The presumption of ‘US personhood’ taking priority over New Zealand citizenship status is a gross insult to the persons affected, many of whom may have never even visited the United States.
9. Accepts U.S. taxing ‘Rights and Obligations’: There is some acknowledgement (Page 3, point 7) of the fact that FATCA reporting on New Zealand residents “that have not consistently complied with their United States reporting and payment obligations” may be exposed to “significant tax and penalty charges”. However this is countered by the statement on Page 6: “While the IGA does not alter any substantive taxing rights, it may have the effect of making the IRS aware of existing non-compliance. However, this is consistent with the aims of FATCA“.[Emphasis added]
10. Does NOT quantify tax and penalty charges: No attempt has been made to quantify the “significant tax and penalty charges” that may be imposed and the huge gaps that exist in the Dual Tax Agreement that do not protect New Zealanders from US self-employment taxes, phantom capital gains, the PFIC regime, ObamaCare tax, or any of the other methods used by the U.S. to extract wealth from New Zealanders.
11. Accepts U.S. Sovereign rights on Kiwi soil: The obnoxious statement “New Zealand respects the sovereign rights of the United States to impose taxes and penalties as it sees fit” rears its ugly head again on Page 4, point 8. This really must be strongly challenged. The US does not respect the sovereign right of New Zealand, or any other nation, by imposing FATCA on the rest of the world and ramming IGAs down their throat to help them break their domestic privacy laws. Why then, does New Zealand respect their ‘sovereign right’, particularly when this involves confiscatory taxation policies and effective asset seizure (e.g. FBAR penalties) that could literally bankrupt affected New Zealanders?
12. Classifies FATCA IGA as Double Tax Arrangements: The legislation will classify the IGA as a ‘double tax arrangements’ as the ability for DTAs to override New Zealand privacy and other laws is already enshrined. This is despite the fact that they bear little to no resemblance to DTAs. DTAs are required to be ratified by the NZ parliament, but it seems the IGA itself will not.
13. No provisions for Parliamentary approval of revisions: The legislation will not prevent the IGA from being modified without parliamentary approval, or other IGAs from being introduced without the need for legislative change or parliamentary inspection. Given the way this IGA has been handled without parliamentary oversight, this is highly undesirable.
14. No Advice and Consent: The IGA has been created by US Treasury bureaucrats and will not be subject to Senate “Advice, Consent’ and ratification. It now seems that NZ wishes to take a similar position, in that the IGA will be implemented by Cabinet without being sent to Parliament for scrutiny or debate. Thus, we now have the position where governments are able to make up agreements between themselves without regard to Privacy or Human Rights laws and have those agreements implemented in their respective countries with no consultation process.
15. NZ has swallowed the U.S. Treasury line that this is an reciprocal agreement: Page 8, point 19 refers to the fact that the IGA “is a reciprocal agreement”. The US currently has no mandate to provide this and in any case the data collection specified is far from reciprocal. The IGA (Annex 1) describes 18 pages of due diligence requirements required to be performed by NZFI. There are none documented in the case of the US.
16. IRD confues a global GATCA and FATCA IGA: They refer to “international trends towards countering tax evasion” on Page 4, point 9. As background, The IRD has recently added a page to the FATCA section on its website expanding upon this. That page links to this document: “Exchange of Information: The Future – Recent International Developments (Including FATCA)”. This document points to numerous references describing the efforts of the G8/G20/OECD to counter tax evasion and create automatic exchange mechanisms. In particular, they highlight the adoption of the Model 1 IGA as a standard by the OECD ‘Global Forum’. The key document is entitled “A Step Change in Tax Transparency – OECD Report for the G8 Summit, June 2013” which refers to the exchange of “FATCA-type information” and the adoption of the Model 1 IGA as a basis for a multi-lateral approach to information sharing. (GATCA)
(Note:) For future reading you might take pause and read this recent article highlighting the Global Elitest approach to Taxation.
It seems the IRD are using this as a justification for the proposed legislation to support the IGA with the US that they intend to sign in the near future. However, if you read the report, you will see that the OECD admits there are significant changes required. Most importantly, “As most jurisdictions only tax residents not citizens, the multilateral model would only need to cover residents” and would require “the removal of identification requirements associated with citizenship”.
This is highly significant, because if the agreement only required reporting on ‘non-residents’ of the reporting country, this would not breach the privacy of, or discriminate against, the residents of the reporting country, which the US Model 1 IGA clearly does.
The other point here (missed by the IRD), is that the proposed OECD multilateral IGA approach would not be used to implement extra territorial laws (FATCA) under the ‘unilateral’ threat of sanctions (the 30% withholding extortion).
Therefore, the OECD proposals and the US version of the FATCA Model 1 IGA are not comparable or compatible in terms of their potential effect on New Zealand and New Zealanders. The impact of the proposed legislation cannot be analysed without detailed analysis of the “foreign account information-sharing agreements” that they implement.
(Note: This just means that if the U.S. is to be part of the multi-lateral OECD GATCA model, it would have to give up the FATCA IGA unilateralism and accept residency based taxation as an ‘international norms’.)
17. Benefits of IGA? Among the benefits cited for entering into an IGA (Page 3) are “Financial institutions….would not be required to carry out some of the more compliance-heavy aspects of FATCA”. How come? Aren’t they still required to put all the due diligence in place etc.? I don’t see how this is much of a benefit. (Note: The real benefit they fail to mention is the IGA removes the 30% penalty, and that is why the FFIs lobby for it, and KiwiSaver would be exempt from reporting.)
Submissions due February 5th.
I can’t find anything on the NZ parliament website that prevents submissions from overseas although I will check that next week when they re-open for business. I think it would be great if they received a few submissions from Canada or elsewhere so that they realize that other parts of the world are watching this. Unless I am mistaken NZ is the only country in the world that is currently seeking public input on their decision prior to signing an IGA to implement FATCA. Submissions from people like Jim Jatras would be particularly welcome …. so much better than just linking to their articles.
Those wishing to do submissions should focus on:
• Why is the signing of an IGA with the US not being subjected to public consultation, or the parliamentary process? This legislation simply enforces the terms of any IGA without any reference to its contents.
• NZ acknowledgement and participation in OECD initiatives to develop multi-lateral information sharing agreements are to be encouraged, subject to the usual cost/benefit analysis. However, the US FATCA IGA should not be implemented as it contains many provisions that are not contemplated in the OECD initiatives.
• The legislation forces NZFI to behave in a way that is inconsistent with the Bill of Rights, in particular freedom from discrimination and unreasonable search and seizure.
• No cost/benefit analysis for New Zealand has been performed for any particular course of action, nor has any impact analysis been done on the numbers of New Zealanders affected or the extent of harm that will be done to them. On that basis alone, the legislation should be rejected.
• The implementation of the IGA breaches New Zealand sovereignty.
Thank you.
Just Me Note:
Some might ask, what is happening with the New Zealand West Island of Australia? It has been more silent than a ‘Kiwi sleeping during the day time’, it would seem.
All I have seen recently is this note from an Australian CPA blogger on Tax Connections, until @Badger just posted this on the FATCA question thread which I admittedly have not yet read or analysed.
I just sent Vinny Eastwood an e-mail with this link. If any others, especially from NZ, want to contact him here’s the webpage …
http://www.thevinnyeastwoodshow.com/contact.html
A little Brockskeeter buzzing might persuade Vinny to do a show about FATCA. 😉
@Em…
Thanks. I just tweeted it to him also @Gureillamedia
So many countries just sleepwalking into disaster. Sad.
I guess it’s easy to throw your citizens under the bus when you don’t see them as your citizens. At least Canada considers those of us with Canadian citizenship as its citizens. I could not imagine how abandoned people like us feel in NZ. And to to proceed with so many unanswered questions? Just goes to show how winning a popularity contest doesn’t necessarily make you a good lawmaker.
It is depressing – Singapore is a classic example – yesterday I received the set of documents to open an account for my soon to be ex wife. We are both dual, and both US Persons (sadly). The papers state that the account held in Singapore will have NO protection under the Singapore bank secrecy laws, will despite being held in Singapore be fully under the laws of the USA, and that she must consent that Credit Suisse will provide any and all information on the account to the US government, the Singapore government and any other relevant authority, AT SUCH GOVERNMENT’s REQUEST. In other words, she will have much less legal protection than if she were to have an account in the USA, and ZERO protection from Singapore.
Non US bank accounts for a US Person are an open book, and most disturbing, if Singapore with its strict bank secrecy laws can completely roll over to the US then what chance does New Zealand or Canada have or any other country. All done in stealth, all done one fine day in an announcement, and all done regardless of the laws of the particular nation.
My ex said she has nothing to hide – but that is not the point is it. That’s like saying the NSA can read all my mail or listen to my conversations because I have nothing to hide. In the end she will sign the papers, because she has no choice and ‘nothing to hide’.
It is depressing and it will get a lot worse before it gets better 🙁
“The legislation is generic and simply compels NZFIs to comply with “foreign account information sharing agreements.”
So broad it is craftily crafted to mean anything they want it to – FATCA and beyond…..
Everyone should beware of this. And watch for FATCA IGA definitions of the word ‘taxpayers’ or new broadly defined terms in our home country treaties that redraw categories and parameters in accordance with extraterritorial and CBT definitions – not just as defined where we are legal tax residents and resident citizens. I posted one like that recently (see my link and excerpt below) from an *article from Jamaica where; “..The definition [of taxpayer] has been broadened to include any person who “is of relevance to a treaty partner in respect of an international tax agreement.”… http://www.jamaicaobserver.com/business/FATCA-and-bank-secrecy-laws_15748644 ). Where ‘taxpayer’ was to be newly understood to be not just home resident taxpayers, but ‘taxpayer’ as defined by the OTHER party.
The article I refer to is worth reading for the broadening of the term ‘taxpayer’ to include how ‘taxpayer’ is defined by an “international treaty partner”, which of course means that if the “international treaty partner” is the US (which in this article, being about FATCA, it is), who taxes the broad category of anyone it defines as a ‘US taxable person’ or entity, regardless of legal tax residence elsewhere on the planet,
* ‘FATCA and bank secrecy laws’
Legal Notes
Wednesday, January 08, 2014
http://www.jamaicaobserver.com/business/FATCA-and-bank-secrecy-laws_15748644
…”Formerly, the definition of “taxpayer” under the RAA was limited to a person liable to tax in Jamaica. The definition has been broadened to include any person who “is of relevance to a treaty partner in respect of an international tax agreement.” The RAA has been amended to give the Commissioner the power to require any person to furnish returns, including information in respect of any other person (whether identified or not) who may be of interest to the Commissioner. Consistent with this, the model IGA requires FIs to furnish annual returns showing account information for US taxpayers to their government who in turn is required to forward the information to the US.
Under the amendments, the investigative powers of the Commissioner have been broadened to include requests for documents in relation to “international tax agreements”………..
…….”The US tax legislation seems to have catalyzed the creation of newer and broader powers for Jamaican tax authorities. These revisions to the RAA have substantially changed bank secrecy in Jamaica.”
Forget the NZ politicians, the NZ courts are going to have to rule on a test case. The bottom line here is upholding the rights of NZ citizenship. The politicians can’t get around the fact one NZ citizen is being treated differently than another. Sole US passport holders may get stuck with FATCA, but dual NZ / US deserve a ‘carve out’ by NZ courts.
Re points #3 and #17, Interesting what NZ and other countries use as their rationale as to the ‘benefit’ of a FATCA IGA – as opposed to the unquantified costs.
The Australian one lists as a benefit:
“The Australian Government involvement with FATCA seeks to facilitate Australian compliance to reduce the Act’s overall burden on Australian business. It is in Australia’s interest to observe FATCA rules and sharing tax information will result in Australia getting a greater share of income from multinational enterprises (MNEs).”
See http://www.aph.gov.au/About_Parliament/Parliamentary_Departments/Parliamentary_Library/pubs/rp/rp1314/QG/FATCA
It would be illuminating to compare what Australia, NZ, and others state as the ‘benefit’, and whether they mention the ‘costs’. And their respective wording re the privacy workarounds.
All this is a warning for Canada and other countries who have not yet signed on to FATCA. Treasury is no doubt giving them helpful suggestions about what to say to the public, and they are probably also cribbing from each other.
US Treasury has gone around the world with this “sovereign right to tax citizens”. Ok, they could give them that point, since their predecessors were dumb enough to sign their original tax treaty. Then NZ and all the other idiots go ahead and give US the sovereign right ro run their own banking systems.
couple that with knowing that the intent of FATCA is to find US citizens in their sovereign country.
@Mark Twain, politicians are worthless idiots. US law writes:
IRS “may not treat individuals differently because of their place of birth, country of origin, ancestry, native language, accent, or because they are perceived as looking or sounding “foreign.” All U.S. citizens, lawful permanent residents, and work authorized individuals are protected from national origin discrimination. The Equal Employment Opportunity Commission has jurisdiction over employers with 15 or more employees.”
http://www.justice.gov/crt/about/osc/htm/Webtypes2005.php
The IRS is an employer with more than 15 employees and place of birth discrimination is a US federal crime.
If there is any Kiwi reading this blog who would be interested in talking to a reporter who wants to write a story on New Zealand FATCA IGA, or just provide a quote he can use, let me know and I will put you in touch with him…
Don, maybe Tim can clarify for us, but I thought a carve out was the sticking point on the Canadian IGA for the reason you mention. The courts might turn a blind eye to the discrimination against USC’s only but duals and citizens are another matter.
@YogaGirl – That exactly what I’m thinking is going to happen. USC’s only will get stuck with FATCA, but the courts can’t turn a blind I to citizens. I have an EU passport and resident EU citizens in any EU country should be treated the same as the ‘locals.’ The precedent already exists. When you move from one EU to country to another, you pay your taxes and receive back the same benefits as anyone else. This is written into EU treaties. Why should the handling of banking / tax data be any difference given all things are equal? Personally I’m researching into a challenge on that basis. This principle needs to be established or else the US will start complaining years later, we have all this data but we can’t collect, extradite, or persecute these rebellious overseas US/dual citizens and we need more help.
If Canada signs an IGA carving out Canadian citizens, would that be considered a “better deal” than what other countries got and therefore it would also apply to all the other countries that have already signed?
Are there any legal experts here that can answer that question?
@Paranoid, and other Kiwis reading here,
Maybe a Kiwi reporter and anyone trying to lobby and warn NZ and Australia about the ‘unintended’ results of signing away their citizens with their FATCA IGA should use this Canadian story as a graphic illustration of who they are throwing under the US bus. They may not be able to blow off opposition when asked how they are protecting their most vulnerable Kiwi citizens from the US assault.
http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/u-s-fatca-tax-law-catches-unsuspecting-canadians-in-its-crosshairs-1.2493864
“A Calgary woman’s developmentally disabled son is caught in a U.S. tax quagmire that she fears may cost him the money she spent years setting aside for his financial future.
“He’s entrapped,” said Carol Tapanila, the 70-year-old mother. “There’s no way out. He is entrapped into U.S. citizenship.”
…Tax law expert Allison Christians calls the Tapanila case “ridiculous” and a “classic example of why the law is unjust.”
marion-wrobel-cba
Canadian Bankers Association’s Marion Wrobel says that FATCA is expensive and does nothing to make banking safer or more sound. (CBC)
The law “was intended to find rich American tax cheats hiding out in Switzerland,” said Christians, who teaches tax law at McGill University, but it “will now punish poor, disabled Americans living in other countries, who are only American by birth.”……………….
Her 40-year-old son was born in a Calgary hospital, but automatically received U.S. citizenship because both his parents were American. That simple fact may soon create financial woes for the Tapanila family.”………..
@Just Me
I just got back from a very welcome FATCA break in the South Island. Thanks so much for posting this and everyone else for your comments. I just want to re-iterate that ANYONE can make submissions to the NZ Government at the link you posted above. It would be great to see a few submissions from Canada or elsewhere just so the Select Committee knows that the passage of this legislation is being watched closely from outside New Zealand.
@Osgood…
Welcome back. Hope you are keeping up with the breaking news in Canada. FATCA is no longer stealth in the frozen north!
This was just drawn to my attention to tonight on something posted on the NZ Minstery of Justice web site. It is dated November 13th. Maybe you pointed it out to me earlier, and it failed to register with me.
Your response to Jeff Orr, Chief Legal Counsel, would naturally be… BS But that is the advice being given to your Parliamentarians, so maybe you know someone who you could contact to challenge this simple statement! Maybe just write him? Wonder who his boss is?
@ Just Me and Osgood
I have an e-mail from Vinny Eastwood. He is asking for a guest suggestion. Can you help?
@ Just Me
Got anyone yet re: Vinny Eastwood interview?
@ Osgood
Do you have any ideas? Vinny may not be quite MSM but he has more heart than any in that bunch combined. It’s time for FATCA awareness to break through in NZ, if for no other reason than to give some very unsuspecting victims a bit of a heads up.
In case anyone is following this situation, here is a short version of all the detail:
1/ The NZ cabinet has already agreed to “negotiate” a Model 1 IGA with the US. This has not been subject to consultation or parliamentary process.
2/ NZ has extensive Privacy laws and Human Rights laws that would need to be broken for our FIs to adhere to FATCA.
3/ The NZ gov has introduced a bill to force NZ FIs to comply with the IGA. It does this by defining the IGA as a Dual Tax Treaty, which overrides domestic Privacy laws. It is not clear to me how this gets round the human rights issues.
4/ The FATCA section (called Foreign account information-sharing agreements) is buried in the bill which contains much unrelated legislation
5/ That bill has been referred to Select Committee and is open for public submissions, closing on 5th Feb. The link for submissions is here: http://www.parliament.nz/en-nz/pb/sc/make-submission/50SCFE_SCF_00DBHOH_BILL12926_1/taxation-annual-rates-employee-allowances-and-remedial
@Osgood.
Your efforts were the inspiration for another article..
New U.S. Tax Regime Trampling Rights in New Zealand and Beyond
Pingback: The Isaac Brock Society
@ Just Me
That is an excellent article in the New American. I think I’ll have to give up trying to find a guest for The Vinny Eastwood Show but I’m going to send him one final e-mail with that link in the hope that he’ll read it and decide to at least give FATCA and the NZ government IGA sell-out a mention on one of his podcasts. I’m pretty sure Vinny is starting to cringe now when anything arrives from my e-mail box anyway (oh no — that pesky Canadian again).
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