By Ariane Luthi

    ZURICH (Reuters) -Swiss lawmakers are seeking to water down government proposals to help prevent financial crime, saying the country needs to stay competitive in global cross-border wealth management where rival centres – including Singapore and the UAE – are gaining ground.

    Switzerland is currently the world’s largest wealth management hub, but could lose that crown as early as this year, according to a forecast from Boston Consulting Group.

    The focus on Swiss competitiveness has intensified since the country was hit with a 39% U.S. import tariff by President Donald Trump, making lawmakers keen to find ways to strengthen the country’s economy.

    The lawmakers say Switzerland needs to slow down its anti-money laundering drive on competitive grounds, an argument also used in other areas, including in the debate over proposed new capital rules for UBS, Switzerland’s biggest bank.

    The Swiss government’s anti-money laundering legislation seeks to implement requirements by the Financial Action Task Force, an international finance watchdog, which has called for countries to come clean on shell companies.

    Barbara Steinemann, a federal lawmaker for the right‑wing Swiss People’s Party, told Reuters that for years, whenever there was foreign pressure on financial transparency, Switzerland dutifully implemented rules, driving up bureaucracy and eroding competitiveness, even as other financial centres held back.

    “This is about a war between financial centres and economic interests,” she said. “The Americans and other European countries would like to take over our business.”

    Switzerland in 2024 implemented the OECD’s minimum 15% tax rate for large multinationals and final Basel III banking standards this year, ahead of other major financial centres.

    But lawmakers are pushing back against the tougher rules in the government’s legislation designed to prevent rogue lawyers, trustees or other advisers facilitating money laundering, describing the curbs as unnecessary and burdensome.

    The transparency drive must not lead to over-regulation, said Simone Gianini of the centre-right Liberals.

    The Liberals, the Swiss People’s Party and centrist party The Centre, which together hold a majority in parliament, rejected an anti-money laundering bill back in 2020.

    “When we pass laws, they are implemented down to the last detail,” The Centre party lawmaker Beat Rieder told parliament in June, suggesting that Switzerland already has a more sophisticated system to combat money laundering than other financial centres.

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