New
Delhi: Swiss government on Thursday said that the amount of money held
by Indians in Swiss banks stood at 2.18 billion Swiss francs at the end
of 2011, rising for the first time in the past five years.
According to reports, the figures were
disclosed by the Swiss National Bank (SNB) in its annual handbook on
Swiss banks published on Thursday.
The total funds held by Indian
individuals and entities include 2.025 billion Swiss francs held
directly by them and 158 million held through ‘fiduciaries’ or wealth
managers.
The funds, described by SNB as
‘liabilities’ of Swiss banks towards their clients from India, are the
official figures disclosed by the Swiss authorities and do not indicate
the quantum of the alleged black money held by Indians in the safe
havens of Switzerland.
Also, SNB’s official figures do not
include the money that Indians or other nationals might have in Swiss
banks in the name of other people.
While there is no official estimate for such unaccounted funds, but some estimates put it as high as $20-25 billion.
As per the data from SNB the quantum of
funds held by Indians in Swiss banks had last increased in 2006 by about
one billion Swiss francs to 6.5 billion Swiss francs (over Rs 40,000
crore), but fell to less than one-third by the end of 2010. It rose by
about Rs 3,500 crore in 2011.
In a white paper on black money tabled
in Parliament last month, the Indian government had also mentioned that
the total liabilities of Swiss banks towards Indians have been coming
down since 2006, and fell by more than Rs 14,000 crore during the
2006-10 period. The liabilities stood at Rs 9,295 crore at the end of
2010, compared to Rs 23,373 crore in 2006.
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