<TABLE cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=0 width="100%" border=0><TBODY><TR><TD class=wintiny noWrap align=right>3222.1 </TD></TR><TR><TD height=8></TD></TR><TR><TD class=msgtxt>http://www.yoursdp.org/index.php/pe...ingapores-future-as-a-financial-centre-part-i
<TABLE class=contentpaneopen><TBODY><TR><TD class=contentheading width="100%">Singapore's future as a financial centre: Part I </TD><TD class=buttonheading align=right width="100%"></TD><TD class=buttonheading align=right width="100%"></TD><TD class=buttonheading align=right width="100%"></TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE><TABLE class=contentpaneopen><TBODY><TR><TD class=createdate vAlign=top>Sunday, 30 November 2008 </TD></TR><TR><TD vAlign=top>Chee Soon Juan
Singapore's status as a financial hub seems secure as we stand head and shoulders above everyone else, at least here in Southeast Asia, in the realm of international banking. Ours has the look and feel of a successful economy steeped in wealth-management, and purring with maximum efficiency and minimum corruption.
It certainly does not convey the impression of a system under-girded by weaknesses and dangers that threaten its progress. And yet, in reality, our standing as a financial centre is being seriously questioned.
It is a situation that few Singaporeans know - much less care about. But as this three-part series of articles will show, it is a matter that calls for urgent attention because of the change in the global financial climate. It is a matter that will mean much to our economic lives in Singapore.
The present piece traces the recent history of Singapore's build up in asset management and the preeminence we have established for ourselves in the world of finance. It also introduces ominous rumblings that have recently occurred, which look set to get louder, about our operations as a banking centre.
Part II describes the changed mood of the global community, especially with the election of Barack Obama as president of the United States, towards the financial system here and elsewhere, and how Singapore is increasingly viewed.
The third installment discusses how the impending changes will affect our viability as a banking hub and what may be in store for us if our plans to continue as financial centre do not materialise.
With the world reeling from an economic meltdown and gripped by fears of terrorism, it may be a good time for Singaporeans to start paying attention to what others are saying about the way we make our money.
Change laws, make money
At the heart of the issue is how our city-state has worked its way up the financial ladder. Circa 1998 in the wake of the Asian financial crisis, the Government decided to make Singapore the financial capital of Asia, if not the world.
At about that time Switzerland, the Mecca of secretive banking, came under pressure from the European Union to amend its laws to enable greater financial transparency and to provide information to on accounts suspected to belong to tax evaders from other European nations.
The PAP Government saw the opportunity and introduced legislation to tighten up secrecy protections in our financial institutions to attract investors and account holders fleeing Switzerland.
In 2001 Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong, then deputy prime minister, finance minister and chairman of the Monetary Authority of Singapore all rolled into one, met with bankers from all over the world to discuss how Singapore could tailor its laws to become a premier banking centre.
Following the consultations, he introduced amendments to the Banking Act to revise secrecy provisions so that "only very few exceptions have been allowed for the disclosure of information relating to a customer's deposit and funds placed for investment" and that "a person who receives customer information will be required by law to keep the information confidential." The penalty for breaking such a law is a fine of up to $125,000 or 3-years' jail or both.
In 2004, trust laws were amended to allow foreigners, especially Europeans, to avoid laws in their home countries that regulate inheritance of an estate by family members.
Financial centre or laundromat?
Mr Lee's efforts worked a miracle. Funds from all over the world poured into our banks and financial institutions. At end-2007, the Monetary Authority of Singapore reported that total assets under management reached $1.173 trillion (approximately US$814 billion) up from $150 billion in 1998, an increase of 682% in 10 years. Eighty-six percent of these funds, which include private banking money, came from outside Singapore. Of these 44 percent was from the Asia-Pacific region and 36 percent from Europe.
We may have gotten a bit of help from websites such as the one below which I came across in the course of writing this piece. It is an expensive-looking but curious website called Offshore-Banking-Singapore.com which describes itself as "the leading information portal for high-net-worth individuals and the mass affluent seeking offshore banking services in Singapore." It adds that:
One of the most attractive aspects of Singapore as an offshore jurisdiction is that it has one of the lowest taxation rates in Asia. Non-residents who park their money in Singapore pay no taxes if that money is earned outside of Singapore, and investment gains earned in Singapore (from stocks for example) are also exempt from tax. Singapore is also one of the few offshore centers which was not included in the EU Savings Tax Directive in 2005, an EU initiative to exchange information on EU citizens parking money abroad for tax reasons. In Singapore, not paying taxes owed to foreign authorities is not a crime. In 2004, Singapore amended its trust laws to allow foreigners to sidestep state interference in many European countries which dictates how inheritance is carved up.
</TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>
</TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>
<TABLE class=contentpaneopen><TBODY><TR><TD class=contentheading width="100%">Singapore's future as a financial centre: Part I </TD><TD class=buttonheading align=right width="100%"></TD><TD class=buttonheading align=right width="100%"></TD><TD class=buttonheading align=right width="100%"></TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE><TABLE class=contentpaneopen><TBODY><TR><TD class=createdate vAlign=top>Sunday, 30 November 2008 </TD></TR><TR><TD vAlign=top>Chee Soon Juan
Singapore's status as a financial hub seems secure as we stand head and shoulders above everyone else, at least here in Southeast Asia, in the realm of international banking. Ours has the look and feel of a successful economy steeped in wealth-management, and purring with maximum efficiency and minimum corruption.
It certainly does not convey the impression of a system under-girded by weaknesses and dangers that threaten its progress. And yet, in reality, our standing as a financial centre is being seriously questioned.
It is a situation that few Singaporeans know - much less care about. But as this three-part series of articles will show, it is a matter that calls for urgent attention because of the change in the global financial climate. It is a matter that will mean much to our economic lives in Singapore.
The present piece traces the recent history of Singapore's build up in asset management and the preeminence we have established for ourselves in the world of finance. It also introduces ominous rumblings that have recently occurred, which look set to get louder, about our operations as a banking centre.
Part II describes the changed mood of the global community, especially with the election of Barack Obama as president of the United States, towards the financial system here and elsewhere, and how Singapore is increasingly viewed.
The third installment discusses how the impending changes will affect our viability as a banking hub and what may be in store for us if our plans to continue as financial centre do not materialise.
With the world reeling from an economic meltdown and gripped by fears of terrorism, it may be a good time for Singaporeans to start paying attention to what others are saying about the way we make our money.
Change laws, make money
At the heart of the issue is how our city-state has worked its way up the financial ladder. Circa 1998 in the wake of the Asian financial crisis, the Government decided to make Singapore the financial capital of Asia, if not the world.
At about that time Switzerland, the Mecca of secretive banking, came under pressure from the European Union to amend its laws to enable greater financial transparency and to provide information to on accounts suspected to belong to tax evaders from other European nations.
The PAP Government saw the opportunity and introduced legislation to tighten up secrecy protections in our financial institutions to attract investors and account holders fleeing Switzerland.
Following the consultations, he introduced amendments to the Banking Act to revise secrecy provisions so that "only very few exceptions have been allowed for the disclosure of information relating to a customer's deposit and funds placed for investment" and that "a person who receives customer information will be required by law to keep the information confidential." The penalty for breaking such a law is a fine of up to $125,000 or 3-years' jail or both.
In 2004, trust laws were amended to allow foreigners, especially Europeans, to avoid laws in their home countries that regulate inheritance of an estate by family members.
Mr Lee's efforts worked a miracle. Funds from all over the world poured into our banks and financial institutions. At end-2007, the Monetary Authority of Singapore reported that total assets under management reached $1.173 trillion (approximately US$814 billion) up from $150 billion in 1998, an increase of 682% in 10 years. Eighty-six percent of these funds, which include private banking money, came from outside Singapore. Of these 44 percent was from the Asia-Pacific region and 36 percent from Europe.
We may have gotten a bit of help from websites such as the one below which I came across in the course of writing this piece. It is an expensive-looking but curious website called Offshore-Banking-Singapore.com which describes itself as "the leading information portal for high-net-worth individuals and the mass affluent seeking offshore banking services in Singapore." It adds that:
One of the most attractive aspects of Singapore as an offshore jurisdiction is that it has one of the lowest taxation rates in Asia. Non-residents who park their money in Singapore pay no taxes if that money is earned outside of Singapore, and investment gains earned in Singapore (from stocks for example) are also exempt from tax. Singapore is also one of the few offshore centers which was not included in the EU Savings Tax Directive in 2005, an EU initiative to exchange information on EU citizens parking money abroad for tax reasons. In Singapore, not paying taxes owed to foreign authorities is not a crime. In 2004, Singapore amended its trust laws to allow foreigners to sidestep state interference in many European countries which dictates how inheritance is carved up.
</TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>
</TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>