Switzerland's banking association head is hopeful the country will finalise a tax deal with Britain in the coming weeks, Patrick Odier was quoted as saying on Sunday in an interview with Swiss newspaper SonntagsZeitung, Reuters reported. Such a deal would come hot on the heels of a tax agreement recently reached between Switzerland and Germany that will net Berlin billions of Swiss francs and force the Swiss banking sector to clean up its act. Odier, president of the Swiss Bankers Association, said talks with Britain were very advanced, though he added important points still have to be clarified. "I have no doubt that we will strike a deal with Britain very soon," Odier said. "I hope that the conclusion comes in the coming weeks," he said. In an interview with Swiss newspaper Sonntag, Claude-Alain Margelisch, chief executive of the Swiss Bankers Association, said that the flat-rate withholding tax rates in the British deal would be in line with Britain's domestic tax burden. Odier also said the German deal had had a "signalling effect" on France and Italy, and that he hoped new negotiations with these countries would be held. "I am sure that other countries in Europe will also say that they would like to reach a deal with Switzerland," Odier said, adding the deal with Germany would likely cost Swiss banks about 500 million francs to implement. Swiss banks have also come into the crosshairs of U.S. authorities.