Indonesian Parliament passes law to chase tax evaders overseas

The Singapore Flyer, center, stands among commercial and residential buildings in Singapore, on Sunday, June 4, 2017. After two years of below-par growth, economists and even Singapore's government are becoming more positive on the city-state's outlook. While it's not boom time yet, the consensus is that 2017 growth will come in higher than last year’s 2 percent. Photographer: Sanjit Das/Bloomberg

Bloomberg

Indonesia moved a step closer to hunting down tens of billions of dollars it believes its citizens have hidden abroad after passing a law that will give tax officials access to financial data held by other countries.
The parliament on Wednesday approved a law in lieu of a presidential decree, fulfilling a requirement to participate under the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development’s Automatic Exchange of Information framework. The law paves the way for Southeast Asia’s biggest economy to ramp up tax collection by getting better access to information on any assets parked in jurisdictions such as Singapore and Hong Kong.
While a tax amnesty launched last year uncovered more than $360 billion, Finance Minister Sri Mulyani Indrawati has estimated another 185 trillion rupiah in tax revenue could be unlocked under the AEOI framework. Indonesia, which has a poor tax collection rate, has been facing a fiscal shortfall and needs to shore up revenue to fund an ambitious infrastructure programme.
Singapore’s Finance Ministry said this month it was ready to exchange data with Indonesia after signing a Multilateral Competent Authority Agreement in June. The exchange can begin after relevant countries implement laws, join a global agreement on tax disclosures, and put in place safeguards on confidentiality and data protection, the ministry said.
Indonesia is working to improve its tax collection resources, according to Suahasil Nazara, head of fiscal policy at the ministry.

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