India, US to step up pursuit of tax evaders and terror financing

India, US to step up pursuit of tax evaders and terror financing
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Highlights

As nations across the globe are in hot pursuit of tax evaders and terror financing, India and the US have agreed to step up their joint work in this area, while Washington has extended its support for India\'s trillion-dollar infrastructure development needs.

Washington: As nations across the globe are in hot pursuit of tax evaders and terror financing, India and the US have agreed to step up
their joint work in this area, while Washington has extended its support for India's trillion-dollar infrastructure development needs.

Visiting Finance Minister Arun Jaitley and US Treasury Secretary Jacob J. Lew met here Thursday evening for the 6th Annual US-India
Economic and Financial Partnership, which was formed in 2010, and released a joint statement, covering collaborations in areas ranging
from regulation to money laundering.

"We are committed to continued collaboration and sharing of experience in tackling offshore tax evasion and avoidance, including joint
tax audits and examination. We look forward to the competent authorities of the two countries engaging in bilateral dialogue to move
forward," the statement said.

"We have enhanced our cooperation in tackling money laundering and combating the financing of terrorism through increased information
sharing and cooperation, including a dialogue held recently in India," the statement said.

"We both agree on the importance of fighting illicit finance in all forms as an important means of tackling global terrorism."

On these fronts, the two governments have already forged an inter-governmental pact to share financial information under the Foreign
Account Tax Compliance Act that. This act requires the US non-residents to share information on their financial assets and revenues
outside the country once a year.

The dialogue under the partnership pact was held even as an Oxfam report said on Thursday that as many as top 50 US companies,
including the likes of Apple, Walmart, General Electric, Microsoft, Google and Coca-Cola, have a whopping $1.4 trillion stashed in
offshore tax havens.

The talks, held on the margins of the World Bank-International Monetary Fund Spring meetings here on Thursday -- which also included
Federal Reserve Chair Janet Yellen and Reserve Bank of India Governor Raghuram Rajan -- also covered Infrastructure.

"We are working together to support India's National Investment and Infrastructure Fund to increase financing options for India's
infrastructure growth. We look forward to continuing discussions in areas such as municipal finance under the future work of the
Initiative," said the statement.

"The next meeting of the Investment Initiative will be in the US later in 2016."

The statement said effort will also continue under the US-India Investment Initiative of January 2015 for the two governments to work
with the private sector on areas like policies and regulatory reforms, besides mobilising capital from domestic and foreign sources to
build infrastructure and create jobs.

"We are encouraged with the developments that have taken place since the launch of the Economic and Financial Partnership and look
forward to continued engagement in an effort to strengthen our relationship, our economies, and the global economy."

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