The US Treasury Department said it will postpone enforcement of a new
law that cracks down on offshore tax avoidance by Americans by six
months until July 1, 2014, giving foreign banks more time to determine
how to comply.
The Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act, or FATCA, requires foreign
banks and other institutions to supply information to the U.S. Internal
Revenue Service about Americans’ offshore accounts worth more than
$50,000.
The law, approved by Congress in 2010, stipulates that foreign
financial institutions that fail to comply can effectively be frozen out
of U.S. capital markets.
Since the law was passed, foreign banks and other businesses have
complained about the costs of FATCA and its scope, saying in some cases
that it conflicts with home-country banking laws that shield account
holder information.
To help banks in countries with legal issues, Treasury and the IRS
have been working on agreements that will let the home-country
governments of foreign banks act as information-disclosing
intermediaries to deal with the IRS.
“We are providing an additional six months to complete agreements
with countries and jurisdictions across the globe,” said Robert Stack,
Treasury deputy assistant secretary for international tax affairs, in a
statement.
The United States has finalized intergovernmental agreements for
FATCA compliance with Germany, Spain, Norway, Switzerland, Ireland,
Mexico, Denmark and the United Kingdom. Dozens more of these pacts are
in negotiation.
A new registration website for banks to sign up with the IRS and
ensure they are complying with FATCA is now set to open on Aug. 19, the
US Treasury said in its statement. The portal had previously been
scheduled to open this week.
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