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Withholding tax (Switzerland)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Withholding tax (German: Verrechnungssteuer, Italian: imposta preventiva, French: impôt anticipé) is a tax levied at source in Switzerland since 1944 on capital income (particularly interest and dividends), lottery winnings and certain insurance benefits.[1][2]

Withheld at a rate of 35% by the company (in particular the bank) providing the taxable benefit, and refundable to taxpayers domiciled in Switzerland who regularly declare their income and assets, it is intended to encourage fiscal probity.[1][3]

Description

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The withholding tax was officially introduced on January 1, 1944, following a Federal Council decision of September 1, 1943,[3] by virtue of the extraordinary powers it had obtained at the outbreak of World War II, with the aim of combating fraud and increasing tax revenues. Initially levied on movable capital and lottery winnings, it was extended the following year to life insurance, life annuities and pensions. It is levied on individuals and companies with domicile, headquarters, assets or economic activities in Switzerland.[4] It has only had a constitutional basis since 1959.[3]

The withholding tax primarily affects interest paid on debt securities issued by Swiss borrowers, interest on assets deposited in Swiss banks, dividends distributed by Swiss companies, and income from units in Swiss investment funds. It is also levied on cash winnings in excess of fifty francs from lotteries held in Switzerland, as well as on capital benefits, annuities, and life annuities under life insurance.[1]

Refund

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Withholding tax is refunded by the cantons (in the form of a deduction from taxes) to individuals with residence in Switzerland, providing they regularly declare the returns concerned and the capital that generated them. It is reimbursed by the Federal Tax Administration to legal entities domiciled in Switzerland, as long as they regularly declare the income concerned as yield.[2]

Persons domiciled abroad may claim reimbursement of withholding tax if their country of residence has concluded a double taxation agreement with the country levying the tax.[1]

Tax rates

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The withholding rate has been 35% since 1976, except for life insurance benefits, which are taxed at 8%, and life annuities and pensions, which are taxed at 15%.[4]

Initially set at 15% in 1944, the rate rose to 25% in 1945, then to 27% in 1958 and 30% in 1967.[1]

Revenue

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In 2003, tax revenues amounted to CHF 22.5 billion and refunds to CHF 20.9 billion.[1] In 2021, this difference will amount to 4.9 billion francs, or 6.4% of total federal revenues.[5]

The cantons have received 10% of net revenues[1] since 2008 (6% since 1967 and 12% since 1971).

Reforms

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In December 2021, the Federal Assembly passed a bill abolishing the withholding tax levied on Swiss corporate bonds, in order to make them more attractive.[6][7][8] The request for a referendum was granted in May 2021,[9] and the vote took place on September 25, 2022, when the people narrowly rejected the amendment to the law with 52% of "no" votes.[10]

References

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  1. ^ a b c d e f g (fr) Conrad Stockar (trans. André Naon), "Impôt anticipé archive" in the Historical Dictionary of Switzerland online, version dated December 13th, 2006.
  2. ^ a b (fr) Swiss Federal Tax Administration, "Impôts en vigueur" archive [PDF], on the official website of Administration fédérale des contributions, May 2021 (accessed June 15th, 2022), p. 14
  3. ^ a b c (fr) Swiss Federal Tax Administration, "Impôt fédéral anticipé" archive [PDF], on the official website of the Administration fédérale des contributions, 2019 (accessed June 15th, 2022)
  4. ^ a b (fr) Bernard Wuthrich, "L'impôt anticipé est une création de la Deuxième Guerre mondiale", Le Temps, November 5th, 2012 (ISSN 1423-3967, read online archive, accessed June 14th, 2022)
  5. ^ (fr) Administration fédérale des finances, "Recettes" archive, on www.efv.admin.ch (accessed June 14th, 2022)
  6. ^ (fr) Agence télégraphique suisse, "Le National veut rendre les obligations suisses plus attractives", Le Temps, September 28th, 2021 (ISSN 1423-3967, read online archive, accessed June 14th, 2022)
  7. ^ (fr) Agence télégraphique suisse, "Chambres fédérales - Impôt anticipé sur les intérêts: la réforme à bout touchant" archive, on Tribune de Genève, December 6th, 2021 (accessed June 14th, 2022)
  8. ^ (fr) "21.024. Withholding tax law. Strengthening the debt capital market" archive, at www.parlement.ch (accessed June 14th, 2022)
  9. ^ (fr) "Le peuple votera sur la réforme de l'AVS et la suppression de l'impôt anticipé" archive, on rts.ch, April 29th, 2022 (accessed June 14th, 2022)
  10. ^ (fr) Département fédéral des finances DFF, "Réforme de l'impôt anticipé (renforcement du marché des capitaux de tiers)" archive, at www.efd.admin.ch, October 15th 2022 (accessed May 15th 2023)
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