Title: The continuing impact of international assessments on financial centres
1The continuing impact of international
assessments on financial centres
- Oxford Symposium
- 5th September 2005
- Marcus Killick
2International Assessments
- Financial Stability Forum
- IMF
- Financial Action Task Force
- Other International Standard Setting Bodies
3Part 1
- The Financial Stability Forum (FSF)
4Background to FSF
- Established through a G-7 meeting in 1999 to
promote international financial stability through
information exchange and international
co-operation in financial supervision and
surveillance. - The FSF aims to co-ordinate the efforts of its
Members in order to promote international
financial stability, improve the functioning of
markets, and reduce systemic risk. - Three initial working parties were created, one
of which was to look at Offshore Financial
Centres
5Report of the Working Group on Offshore Financial
Centres (OFCs) (5 April 2000)
- This report was produced under the terms of
reference for the Working Group created to
consider OFCs - The OFC working Group were asked to
- Consider the uses of OFCs and the possible role
they have had or could play in posing threats to
the stability of the financial system - Evaluate the adherence of OFCs with
internationally accepted standards and good
practices, and - Make recommendations , including to enhance
problematic OFCs observance of international
standards
6Methodology
- A core element of the methodology was a survey
which was sent to the supervisors in major
financial centres and the supervisors in
financial centres with significant offshore
activities - As such the report paid significant attention to
external perceptions - Meeting with major internationally active
financial institutions together with regulators
and other relevant groups. There were no on-site
visits to the jurisdictions themselves - Emphasis on other jurisdictions views the centres
being assessed rather then objective testing
7Overall Findings
- The report was designed for assisting in the
setting of priorities and in encouraging OFCs to
take appropriate steps to improve the quality of
supervision and degree of co-operation - It was not designed for identifying OFCs for
sanctions or other punitive action - Offshore financial activities are not inimical to
global financial activity provided they are well
supervised and supervisory authorities
co-operate, however - OFCs that are unwilling or unable to adhere to
international standards create a potential
systemic risk
8Specific concerns(These did not relate to every
OFC under review)
- The level of cross border co-operation on
information exchange - The quality of underlying supervision
- The lack of due diligence when financial
institutions are formed - The lack of availability of timely information on
beneficial ownership - The lack of comprehensive and timely dataon OFCs
financial activities impedes effective monitoring
and analysis of capital movements.
9Jurisdictional classes
- Following the survey the jurisdictions reviewed
were grouped into three categories reflecting
their perceived quality of supervision and
perceived degree of co-operation - The categorisation did not constitute judgements
about any jurisdictions adherence to
international standards nor that the
categorisation applies to all sectors of the
financial system within the OFC
10Jurisdictional classes
- Group I jurisdictions would be generally
perceived as having legal infrastructures and
supervisory practices and/or a level of resources
devoted to supervision and co-operation relative
to the size of their financial activities, and/or
a level of co-operation that is largely of a good
quality and better than that in other OFCs - Group II jurisdictions would be generally
perceived as having legal infrastructures and
supervisory practices and/or a level of resources
devoted to supervision and co-operation relative
to the size of their financial activities, and/or
a level of co-operation that is largely of a
higher quality than Group III but lower than
Group I - Group III jurisdictions would be generally
perceived as having legal infrastructures and
supervisory practices and/or a level of resources
devoted to supervision and co-operation relative
to the size of their financial activities, and/or
a level of co-operation that is largely of a
lower quality than Group I.
11Group I and II Jurisdictions
- Group 1
- Dublin
- Guernsey
- Hong Kong SAR
- Isle of Man
- Jersey
- Luxembourg
- Singapore
- Switzerland
- Group II
- Andorra
- Bahrain
- Barbados
- Bermuda
- Gibraltar
- Labuan (Malaysia)
- Macau SAR
- Malta
- Monaco
12Group III Jurisdictions
- Anguilla
- Antigua and Barbuda
- Aruba
- Belize
- British Virgin Islands
- Cayman Islands
- Cook Islands
- Costa Rica
- Cyprus
- Lebanon
- Liechtenstein
- Marshall Islands
- Mauritius
- Nauru
- Netherlands Antilles
- Niue
- Panama
- St Kitts and Nevis St Lucia
- St Vincent and the Grenadines
- Samoa
- Seychelles
- The Bahamas
- Turks and Caicos
- Vanuatu
13Recommendations
- Included
- That the IMF take responsibility for developing,
organising and carrying out a process for
assessing OFCs adherence to relevant
international standards - That a survey of banking, insurance and
securities supervision and degree of co-operation
is - That the IMF undertake the assessment recommended
by FSF
14Current Position
- The FSF has announced that the 2000 list has
served its purpose and is no longer operative
(Press release of 11th March 2005) - the FSF has stated that it is committed to a
process, based on objective criteria and due
process, to promote further improvements in OFCs.
Such a process will include a set of initiatives
by its members at both international and national
levels and appropriate steps by the FSF - This multi-tiered process will encompass
- Actions by standard setting bodies
- IMF Assessments
- Initiatives by National Authorities
- Provision of Technical Assistance, and
- Work of the FSF itself
- The FSF will review the position again in 2007
15Part 2
- International Monetary Fund
16Background
- The FSF initial 2000 listing of OFCs led to an
IMF assessment programme of OFCs, which commended
in 2001, - The programme consisted of an initial fact
finding questionnaire followed by an on site
visit. - Jurisdictions have been assessed either through a
Module 2 assessment or under the Financial Sector
Assessment Program (FSAP) - Of the 42 assessments 25 have been under Module 2
and 15 have (or will be done under FSAP)
17Module 2 Assessments
- A Module 2 assessment evaluates the compliance of
supervisory and regulatory systems with
international standards in the banking sector,
and, if significant, in the insurance and
securities sectors. It also assesses the
effectiveness of the anti-money laundering and
combating the financing of terrorism regime. - Standards of the Basel Committee on Banking
Supervision (BCBS), the International Association
of Insurance Supervisors (IAIS), the
International Organization of Securities
Commissions (IOSCO), and the Financial Action
Task Force (FATF) Recommendations are the
yardsticks used.
18Jurisdictions assessed under Module 2
- Aruba
- Cyprus
- Gibraltar
- Macao
- Panama
- Andorra
- Anguilla
- Bahamas
- British Virgin islands
- Guernsey
- Jersey
- Isle of Man
- Liechtenstein
- Labuan
- Marshall islands
- Monaco
- Montserrat
- Netherlands Antilles
- Palau
- Samoa
- Seychelles
- Vanuatu
- Belize
- Bermuda
- Cayman Islands
- Turks and caicos islands
- Cook islands
19FSAP Assessments
- Assessments under the FSAP, in addition to
evaluating observance of relevant financial
sector standards and codes, consider risks to
macroeconomic stability stemming from the
financial sector and the capacity of the sector
to absorb macroeconomic shocks
20Jurisdictions assessed under FSAP
- Ireland
- Lebanon
- Costa Rica
- Luxembourg
- Switzerland
- Barbados
- Hong Kong
- Malta
- Mauritius
- Singapore
- Dominica
- Grenada
- St Kitts and Nevis
- St Lucia
- St Vincent and the Grenadines
- Antigua and barbuda
21Current position
- As at March 2005, The first phase of the OFC
assessment program was virtually complete.
Forty-one of the 44 jurisdictions contacted at
the inception of the program had been assessed. - Of the remaining three Bahrain remains to be
addressed whilst Nieu and Nauru are receiving
technical assistance - All but one jurisdiction has published or
indicated their intention to publish their
assessment reports.
22Findings
- Compliance with standards in OFCs is, on average,
better than in other jurisdictions assessed under
the FSAP, - For example 50 percent of offshore jurisdictions
comply with every principle and recommendation
directly concerned with cooperation and
information exchange as opposed to 47 percent of
other assessed jurisdictions. - Deficiencies tend to be in the lower income
jurisdictions. - Supervisory deficiencies were most frequently
found to result from inadequate resources and
skills - Deficiencies which also remain including
inadequate onsite inspections, inability to
address cooperation on terrorist financing, need
to expand mutual legal assistance treaties, and
lack of formal agreements to share information.
23Next steps
- In November 2003, the IMF determined that the
second phase of the OFC program should
incorporate four broad elements - Regular monitoring of OFCs' activities and
compliance with supervisory standards - Improved transparency of OFC supervisory systems
and activities - Technical assistance in collaboration with
bilateral and multilateral donors - Collaboration with standard-setters and the
onshore and offshore supervisors to strengthen
standards and exchanges of information.
24Next Steps (Cont)
- The IMF has determined that that it would be
appropriate to continue periodic monitoring of
OFCs compliance with relevant international
regulatory standards. Module 2 assessments every
45 years were generally considered appropriate,
focusing mainly on those jurisdictions that are
not covered by FSAPs, but it was also noted that
the program should be sufficiently flexible to
allow for more frequent targeted assessments to
address areas of immediate concern
(risk-focused assessments). - Participation in the second round of assessments
remains voluntary.. (FSF considers jurisdictions
will be incentivised as participation will draw
attention to their willingness to cooperate).
25The next round of reviews
- Cyprus and Panama have already been through the
second round of assessments - Gibraltar has agreed to an assessment in early
2006 - These are concentrating on addressing the
recommendations made in the first round. - Some jurisdictions with insignificant
cross-border activity will be subject to off-site
monitoring only, and additional jurisdictions are
being considered for assessment (Brunei, Cubai,
Botswana, San Marino and Uruguay - During the second round of assessments, priority
will be given to assessing weaknesses identified
in the first round of assessments relevant areas
not previously assessed and cooperation and
information sharing arrangements. - Assessments will take account of revisions in
international standards. For instance the FATF
Recommendations were revised in 2003 and a ninth
Special Recommendation on Terrorist Financing
added in 2004, and the IAIS Core Principles were
revised in October, 2003 to include, in
particular, the supervision of reinsurance. - The assessments will also give significantly
increased attention to cooperation and
information exchange. reports on jurisdictions
with international and offshore financial centers
(IOFCs) will include a dedicated section bringing
together the implications for cooperation and
information exchange in each of the sectoral
assessments
26Technical Assistance (TA)
- TA forms a key part of the IMF programme
- IMF consider that TA should focus on those OFCs
that have the resources and commitment to benefit
most, or that experience the greatest
shortcomings in complying with international
standards. - TA has concentrated on the smaller jurisdictions
facing the most significant supervisory
challenges, with particular emphasis on AML/CFT,
as well as basic banking supervision. - Particular areas of concern and statistical
issues have also been addressed in a small number
of larger jurisdictions
27Part 3
- The Financial Action Task Force
28What is the FATF?
- Intergovernmental body, established by the G-7
Summit in 1989 - Purpose is to develop and promote policies to
combat money laundering - Has developed a set of forty recommendations
designed to achieve the above - Original focus was on drug money but this has
grown to cover the proceeds of all serious
criminal offences - FATF have established 40 recommendations (last
reviewed in 2003) which form the international
standard in the fight against money laundering - Following 9/11 Special Recommendations (now
nine) were added to counter the financing of
terrorism - The FATF also produces an annual typologies
report looking at new money laundering techniques
and ways to counter them.( (for 2004/05 these
included Alternative remittance systems, wire
transfers and terrorist financing techniques) - FATF has no per se power to enforce its
recommendations, however recommendation 21 allows
it to seek its members take countermeasures
against jurisdictions identified as posing a
particular money laundering or terrorist threat.
29FATF and Offshore
- FATF had become increasingly concerned as to the
use of offshore centres in the laundering of
criminal proceeds - Concern centres around
- Offshore financial institutions and their
regulation - Offshore companies
- Inadequate anti money laundering legislation
- Lack of information sharing and other
co-operation (eg because of bank secrecy laws) - Ability of persons to operate with effective
anonymity - FATF therefore agreed on a process of identifying
non-cooperative jurisdictions with a view to
taking action against them to encourage them into
compliance
30Report on non-cooperative countries and
territories (NCCTs) February 2000
- Identified detrimental rules and practices that
exist in noncooperative countries and
territories - Establishment of 25 criteria against which the
jurisdictions are to be measured. Criteria based
on FATFs 40 Recommendations - Identification of possible non-cooperative
jurisdictions. Focus on those whose character or
size present the greatest risk to undermining
existing anti money laundering regimes
31Review to identify NCCTs- Methodology
- Gathering of relevant laws and regulations,
mutual evaluation reports, related progress
reports and self assessment surveys - Analysis of the above with respect to the 25
criteria - A draft report was then sent to the relevant
jurisdiction for review and comment - Specific further questions were directed to any
jurisdictions where considered necessary for
clarification of any issues - Open face to face discussions then took place
with the jurisdictions and FATF and - Draft reports produced.
- Reports were then discussed with the respective
juisdictions - Finalised reports were discussed at FATF Plenary
session
32Findings
- June report summarised findings on 29
jurisdictions - Some summaries (ie those who were being placed on
the blacklist) detailed the criteria which the
jurisdiction met (meeting a criteria meant the
jurisdiction was non-cooperative in that area).
Others (ie those of jurisdictions who were not on
the blacklist )simply made a generalised comment - All reviewed jurisdictions had some areas for
improvement - Further jurisdictions added in a follow up review
in 2001. - Since 2001, the FATF has not reviewed any new
jurisdictions under the NCCT process. - Of the 23 jurisdictions designated as NCCTs in
2000 and 2001, only three remain.( Myanmar,
Nauru, and Nigeria)
33Areas identified as being of particular concern
- The practice of some jurisdictions of allowing
indirect reporting of suspicious transactions - The use of introducers
- Difficulty in establishing beneficial ownership
of some legal entities - The lower verification and disclosure
requirements imposed on International Business
Companies - The lack of application of the know your customer
rules to clients in existence prior to the
requirements coming into force
34Further action
- In accordance with FATF Recommendation 21 FATF
recommended that financial institutions should
give special attention to business relationships
and transactions from blacklisted jurisdictions. - The FATF has also introduced a tour de table
mechanism where members and observers will be
able to raise issues and present cases where
international cooperation has been difficult. - FATF has offered technical assistance to those on
the blacklist to help them improve their
legislation, rules and practices
35Current position
- In 2004 the FATF in conjunction with others
produced a AML/CFT methodology designed to
provide a common benchmark against which a
jurisdictions compliance with 409
recommendations can be assessed. - The FATF started a third round of mutual
evaluations for its members in January 2005 - The FATF is promoting increased transparency and
co-operation through the open distribution of the
reports to all FATF members and observers and the
discussion of the reports in open session in the
FATF Plenary - To ensure global consistency, the FATF has agreed
similar or common processes, documents and
procedures with all the bodies and organisations
that produce assessment reports based on the FATF
Recommendations and the 2004 AML/CFT Methodology. - The IMF in its latest review of OFTs will use
the AML/CFT methodology. This will help overcome
concerns that jurisdictions were not all being
measured to the same standard.
36Part 4
- Other International Standard setting bodies
37International Organisation of Securities
Commissions (IOSCO)
- IOSCO was established in 1983 from the
transformation of its ancestor inter-American
regional association (created in 1974) into
aainternational cooperative body - Its membership stands at 181 members and is still
growing rapidly. The Organization's members
regulate more than 90 of the world's securities
markets - IOSCO has established its Objectives and
Principles of Securities Regulation which sets
out 30 principles of securities1 regulation,
which are based upon three objectives of
securities regulation. - These are
- The protection of investors
- Ensuring that markets are fair, efficient and
transparent - The reduction of systemic risk.
- These objectives and principles form the
benchmark against which IMF assess OFCs
compliance with international standards of
investment, mutual funds and securities
regulation.
38IOSCO- Mutual Memoranda of Understanding
- IOSCO has expanded its efforts in relation to the
signing of Multilateral MOU by all IOSCO members. - Giving the commitment to sign the MMOU will also
trigger a IOSCO assessment to verify the
jurisdictions readiness. It is anticipated that
the process from commitment to acceptance will
take anytime between nine to eighteen months. - Problems with jurisdictions will be dealt with
confidentially between the two parties until such
time as IOSCO believes there to be a need to
escalate the process and at which stage it may
decide to blow the whistle to FSF. - Target date for all IOSCO members to have signed
the MMOU is 2010.
39Basel Committee on Banking Supervision (BCBS)
- RCBS was established at the end of 1974.
Countries are represented by their central bank
and also by the authority with formal
responsibility for the prudential supervision of
banking business where this is not the central
bank. - BCBS formulates broad supervisory standards and
guidelines and recommends statements of best
practice in the expectation that individual
authorities will take steps to implement them
through detailed arrangements - statutory or
otherwise - which are best suited to their own
national systems - in 1997 BCBS developed a set of "Core Principles
for Effective Banking Supervision", which
provides a comprehensive blueprint for an
effective supervisory system. To facilitate
implementation and assessment, BCBS in October
1999 developed the "Core Principles Methodology".
- These Core principles form the benchmark against
which IMF assess OFCs compliance with
international standards of banking supervision
40Basel Committee - Developments
- A review of the Basel Core Principles is
presently underway and well advanced. The
offshore perspective is being catered for
through the involvement of Hong Kong. There will
still be 25 principles with a number of the
existing principles being collapsed into one
another making way for some new ones. - The assessment methodology for the revised
methodology will also be published and will still
contain essential and additional criteria. The
final document is expected in Summer 2006. - The Committee has also worked on revising its
Corporate Governance paper in light of the OECD
paper on the issue and this was issued for public
consultation in July 2005.
41International Association of Insurance
Supervisors (IAIS)
- Established in 1994, the International
Association of Insurance Supervisors (IAIS)
represents insurance supervisory authorities of
some 180 jurisdictions. It was formed to - Promote cooperation among insurance supervisory
authorities - Set international standards for insurance
supervision and regulation - Provide training to members
- Coordinate work with regulators in the other
financial sectors and international financial
institutions. - The IAIS issues global insurance principles,
standards and guidance - These standards represent the global benchmark
against which the IMF assesses insurance
regulation in the OFCs