In a radio interview given last week, Vanuatu's Finance Minister, Sela Molisa
revealed that a new International Banking Act designed to place the jurisdiction's
international and offshore banks under the supervision of the Reserve Bank of
Vanuatu has been passed by Parliament.
'That bill now allows offshore banks to continue, but their supervision will
be done by the Reserve Bank of Vanuatu. Currently the Vanuatu Financial Services
Commission supervises these banks,' he explained, adding that in view of the
need for increased anti-money laundering vigilance:
'We have to shift the supervision of these banks, offshore banks, to the Reserve
Bank because the Reserve Bank has a better networking (relationship) with...counterparts
in all other countries.'
Although Vanuatu has secured removal from the FATF's list of countries considered
vulnerable to money laundering activity, it remains on the OECD's harmful tax
competition list, a state of affairs which the Finance Minister hopes will soon
change, due to recent efforts.
When questioned as to whether any drop in revenue is expected as a result of
the new tougher regulatory procedures, Mr Molisa observed that:
'The Finance Centre contributes about 11% to 12% to Vanuatu's GDP. So it is
important, significant...we'd like to see it continue. But we want to be seen
as a good, clean centre. We don't want money laundering passing through Vanuatu.'