Offshore Onshore Mag

Offshore jurisdictions to onshore jurisdictions news and reports magazine.
Home Sitemap
Search
Subscribe now & get informed!
We keep a close connection with specialists from all worldwide jurisdictions to offer you important news and articles.
GO
Browse by Categories
Asset Protection
Banking
Development
Doing Business
E-Commerce
Economy
EU VAT & The Internet
Finance
Frauds
Fund Management
Government
International
International Banking
International Investment
International Trading
Investment
Legislation & Law
Offshore Banking
Offshore Company
Offshore Foundations
Offshore Trusts
Onshore
Politics
Property Investment
Real Estates
Trading
News Details
Switzerland Remains Defiant Over Tax System * Switzerland Remains Defiant Over Tax System







Members of the Swiss government have reiterated their determination not to give an inch to the European Union regarding the country's tax system.

According to the European Commission, the Swiss tax system is "incompatible" with the 1972 free trade agreement between Switzerland and the EU because it distorts trade within the bloc.

The EC takes issue with laws that allow local cantonal governments considerable freedom to set their own levels of taxation in a bid to attract international holding companies and high-net-worth individuals to relocate in Switzerland.

However, speaking earlier this week, Michael Ambuhl, a senior official of the Swiss Foreign Ministry, repeated the government's long-held view that the Swiss tax system has no bearing on the trade agreement with the EU.

"Our position is absolutely clear," he stated, according to Swiss Radio, continuing: "The cantonal taxes do not constitute a subsidy – indirect or direct – to the exchange of goods, and as such do not affect the free-trade agreement."

Ambuhl's statement follows closely in the wake of comments made by Swiss Foreign Minister Micheline Calmy-Rey in a Sunday newspaper interview, where she stated that there is "absolutely no room for negotiation," regarding Swiss tax laws, highlighting a growing impasse between Berne and Brussels on the issue.