Inheritance tax deal signed with France

Switzerland and neighbouring France have signed a controversial deal on inheritance tax as part of an amended double taxation agreement. Paris hopes to bring in more money from wealthy tax dodgers.

Switzerland and neighbouring France have signed a controversial deal on inheritance tax as part of an amended double taxation agreement. Paris hopes to bring in more money from wealthy tax dodgers.

Under the accord signed in the French capital on Thursday, inheritances would be taxed based on where the recipient resides not where the deceased lived, as used to be the case.
 
France, which taxes inheritance progressively up to 45 per cent, compared with Switzerland’s maximum of seven per cent, hopes the new agreement will make it harder for people living in France to evade taxes.
 
France is one of a growing number of cash-strapped governments trying to find tax cheats squirreling away cash in Swiss accounts.
 
The agreement, which still needs approval by the parliaments in both countries, would also allow France to ask Switzerland to investigate suspicious bank activity even if it does not have the suspects‘ names.

First step

The French finance minister, Pierre Moscovici, praised the new accord as an improvement on tax transparency which helped to close a legal loophole.
 
His Swiss counterpart, Eveline Widmer-Schlumpf, said Switzerland would have preferred to keep the tax agreement from 1953.
 
«But the agreement is no longer in line with the will of France,» she told journalists.
 
Both ministers said the new accord was a first important step in solving a series of tax spats between the two countries, including untaxed assets on Swiss bank accounts and lump sum taxation, as well as a dispute about the Basel-Mulhouse airport shared jointly by France and Switzerland.
 
The announcement by France in 2011 to review the tax agreement caused a public uproar and led to some re-negotiations.

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