JAKARTA. Indonesian government will be struggling to gain revenues from repatriation of Indonesians assets abroad. Recently, banks in Singapore launch a move to prevent Indonesians to repatriate their funds. According to Reuters on Thursday (15/9), some Singaporean banks will share the data of the assets of their Indonesian clients, who embrace the tax amnesty program, with Commercial Affairs Department (CAD), a police unit deals with financial crime. Since last year, CAD has given instruction to Singaporean banks to provide suspicious transaction report (STR) of Indonesian clients who take part in tax amnesty program. A senior banker in Singapore told Reuters that when the clients declare their participations in tax amnesty, the bank will be suspicious that the assets in the bank are not compliant. Therefore, the bank should report the assets to Singaporean authority.
Singaporean banks obstruct tax amnesty
JAKARTA. Indonesian government will be struggling to gain revenues from repatriation of Indonesians assets abroad. Recently, banks in Singapore launch a move to prevent Indonesians to repatriate their funds. According to Reuters on Thursday (15/9), some Singaporean banks will share the data of the assets of their Indonesian clients, who embrace the tax amnesty program, with Commercial Affairs Department (CAD), a police unit deals with financial crime. Since last year, CAD has given instruction to Singaporean banks to provide suspicious transaction report (STR) of Indonesian clients who take part in tax amnesty program. A senior banker in Singapore told Reuters that when the clients declare their participations in tax amnesty, the bank will be suspicious that the assets in the bank are not compliant. Therefore, the bank should report the assets to Singaporean authority.