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Macau and the United States of America sign financial cooperation agreement aimed at US taxpayers 

Macau and the United States of America have signed an agreement that will require local financial institutions to directly inform the United States Internal Revenue Service (IRS) about American taxpayers’ bank accounts.

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Macau and the United States of America have signed an agreement that will require local financial institutions to directly inform the United States Internal Revenue Service (IRS) about American taxpayers’ bank accounts.

A Macau government statement said the agreement will facilitate compliance with the “Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act” (FATCA) by financial institutions operating in Macau.

According to the document signed on providing information to the IRS, it can be “supplemented by a request by the organisation, by group, for the purpose of information exchange, at government level, on certain American taxpayers.”

Under the signed document, “financial institutions operating in Macau need to register and enter into individual agreements with the IRS (…) and obtain the consent of the account holders who are US taxpayers for the purpose of providing information about these accounts on an annual basis.”

The requirements of the measure are “aimed at specific American taxpayers, including US citizens, US residents and certain entities established in the United States of America or controlled by American people.”

The agreement was signed by the Secretary for Economy and Finance, Leong Vai Tac, and the Consul General of the United States to Hong Kong and Macau, Kurt Tong, and follows negotiations on the issue that ended in November 2014.

(Macau News / Macauhub)

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