Posted on 20 January 2011
Tags: account, account holder, accounts, America, amoun, Auditing, auditor, bank, bank account, Bank Accounts, Bank secrecy, banker, bankers, banking, Banking in Switzerland, banking laws, bankrupt, bankruptcies, Banks, banks in switzerland, Business_Finance, capacity, citizen, conditions, country, court, credit, criminal proceedings, Deposit account, different methods, Economy of Switzerland, employee, Ethics, EUR, European Union, Federal law, Federal Reserve System, government, Inheritance tax, interest, investmen, Law of the United States, laws, laws and regulations, legal formalities, Offshore bank, private citizen, regulations, savings, savings banks, securities, Swiss, swiss bank, swiss bank account, swiss bank account exemptions, swiss bank account laws, swiss bank account regulations, Swiss Bank Accounts, swiss banker, swiss bankers association, Swiss banks, swiss federal banking commission, swiss government, Switzerland, taxation, Terms And Conditions, UBS, united states, USA, With-holding
Opening an account in Swiss banks is accompanied with some rules, laws, and regulations. The basic rule is about the age of account opener, that if the account opener is a national of any other country, other than Switzerland, that account opener should be above 18 years old. The exemption and taxation on your amount is also done under certain rules.
Laws and Regulations of Swiss Banks
In Switzerland, nobody, even the Swiss government is allowed to reveal any information regarding accounts or account holders until an account holder is not a criminal.

But in USA even a private citizen has an easy access to it, i.e. in America any one; even a normal citizen can get information of any account holder. The Swiss banker’s requirement of client confidentiality is found in Article 47 of the Federal Law on Banks and Savings Banks, which came into effect on November 8, 1934. In the books of banking laws, this article act is defined as;
“Anyone acting in his/her capacity as member of a banking body, as a bank employee, agent, liquidator or auditor, as an observer of the Swiss Federal Banking Commission (SFBC), or as a member of a body or an employee belonging to an accredited auditing institution, is not permitted to divulge information entrusted to him/her or of which he/she has been apprised because of his/her position.”
Exceptions of Swiss bank accounts
It is discussed in Swiss Bankers Association that no bank is allowed to provide the information and details of any account to any one.
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Posted on 20 October 2009
Tags: assets, beneficiary, death tax, estate tax, Inheritance tax, inherited property, legal will and testament, local and federal governments, maintaining and increasing public services, tax burden, taxation, taxes
Any type of taxation that is placed on the assets of a decedent when those assets are redistributed to beneficiaries in accordance with the wishes expressed in a legal will and testament is referred to as death tax. Inheritance tax is one of the more common examples of a death tax. However, depending on the laws that apply in a given jurisdiction a death tax may take on several different forms.

Death tax in USA
In the United States, a death tax refers to the incidence of an estate tax that is the obligation of a beneficiary to pay as a part of the process of assuming control of the property. Closely related to death tax is the inheritance tax, by which taxes are applied to any type of financial asset that is willed to the beneficiary. For applying the death tax there is no uniform process among all states within the Union.
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