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Tuesday February 24, 06:19 PM
Swiss finance sector halved if bank secrecy dropped: banker

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GENEVA (AFP) - Switzerland's key financial services industry could be decimated if its trademark secrecy is given up as part of reforms to cope with the global economic crisis, a prominent Swiss private banker warned.

Without banking secrecy, "the financial centre would shrink by up to half of its current size," Ivan Pictet, a private banker who heads the Geneva Financial Centre bank association, told Le Temps daily on Tuesday.

"Rather than making up about 12 percent of gross domestic product, the financial sector would make up just about six or seven," he said when asked what would happen if Switzerland gives up its bank secrecy practices in the face of calls for greater financial system transparency.

Critics say that the system must be made more transparent so that financial risk can be more easily assessed and capital flows more easily monitored, two key failings contributing to the current crisis.

That has put Switzerland on the spot because its banking system has prided itself on offering complete secrecy for clients, which many critics claim means the country has in effect allowed wealthy foreign clients to evade tax.

In Switzerland, tax evasion is not a crime but tax fraud -- which involves the forgery of documents, is.

Swiss banking secrecy law prohibits banks in Switzerland from revealing any information to authorities or any third parties about their clients, except in cases involving recognized criminal investigations.

A Swiss bank would not therefore transmit details in cases of evasion but would do so only in instances of fraud.

Last week, UBS provided data on 250 to 300 clients to the US government and paid a fine of 780 million dollars to settle a case of abetting tax fraud by US clients, in a move seen at the time as easing the threat of change.

A day later, however, the US government filed a separate lawsuit to try to force UBS to disclose the identities of 52,000 US customers who allegedly evaded taxes, putting the issue back firmly in the spotlight.

Fears that the secrecy laws will be changed put Swiss banking stocks under pressure last Thursday, with UBS plunging almost 17 percent at one point.

UBS continued to tumble to historic lows on Tuesday, trading down 4.70 percent to 9.53 Swiss francs in afternoon trade.

Pictet said that Thursday's falls in share values did not represent the expected cost to the industry should banking secrecy be abandoned.

"If (banking secrecy) were to disappear, the client would no longer have any reason to travel 500 kilometres to see his wealth manager," he warned.

But international pressure is mounting, with European leaders preparing for the meeting of the Group of 20 nations in April calling Sunday for a list of "uncooperative jurisdictions" to be drawn up, with sanctions to be imposed.

Pictet said that was a "real threat" and called for Switzerland to "fight for equal treatment as all other financial centres such as Singapore."

He said abolishing banking secrecy could have a "huge" impact on Geneva.

"The 140 or so banks which are in Geneva would no longer have reason to stay, they are here to offer Swiss banking secrecy.

"The traditional Swiss knowledge on wealth management would be insufficient in itself to compensate for the loss of the protection of the private sphere."

Banking secrecy is meant to "protect the private sphere of the client and there is no prosperous financial centre that does not efficiently protect the confidentiality of its clients," he said.

Pictet also rejected the suggestion that Switzerland's financial centre thrives on tax evasion, saying it is "not the role of a banker to assure that his client is paying his taxes.

"That would require a police investigation before determining if the client could be accepted or not," he added.

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