Capital on the run

The secretive world of private international banking is set to change. Regulatory reform may be slow but it is coming. By Christopher Stoakes.

Capital flight has been in the news a lot lately. This has focused attention on those aspects of private international banking, especially secrecy and anonymity, that make it so appealing to banks and customers alike. Two things have accelerated the introduction of regulation in this field. The first is the increasingly public involvement of banks, accountants and lawyers, without whose connivance capital flight from emerging markets could not take place. The second is the realization that it can affect developed countries: for example, German citizens place deposits in Luxembourg to avoid taxes, a practice often encouraged by their domestic bankers.

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