Congress must clarify how the infrastructure bill will impact cryptocurrency – TechCrunch

December 18, 2021 by No Comments


Christopher Morton is COO of Cognito.

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The $1 trillion U.S. infrastructure bill, signed into law by President Joe Biden last week, contains provisions that would tax cryptocurrency trades and yield the U.S. government some $2.8 billion a year.

That is, frankly, not a lot of money.

The issue is that the crypto tax element of the law is not clearly written, and the government risks squashing a burgeoning part of the economy.

The infrastructure bill says “a brokerage” needs to keep track of these things. But you can enter into a smart contract without a brokerage, so who is responsible for reporting in that case? Would a miner be considered a brokerage?

There’s no question that, on some level, the government is due taxes earned from cryptocurrency trading like any other investment gain — typically at the time a person liquidates, or like a transfer of property. But the vagueness of the law risks either trading platforms eliminating access for U.S. citizens or simply preventing smaller cryptocurrency investors from joining or remaining in the market.

We’ve seen this before. FATCA, the Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act, caused some financial institutions to block U.S. citizens from using their services because the compliance rules were too burdensome relative to the risk and potential benefit.

Here are a few scenarios — some simple and some complex — that need to be thought through:

  • If you buy a car using bitcoin, the time you use the bitcoin to buy a car would be when you’re taxed. That’s easy enough.
  • If you go to a crypto exchange and use dollars to buy Ether, it should be easy to figure out how to tax. That’s also a straightforward transaction.
  • If you transfer your crypto into a smart contract you’re using to hold an NFT that other people buy, things get messy quickly, running the risk of individuals dealing with taxes that have the complexity of a corporate transaction.

The minimum is $10,000 — a carryover from the Bank Secrecy Act. Transactions below that amount are not taxed, but $10,000 is a fairly low amount of money to have to deal with a complex tax situation.

The tax reporting for trading platforms and investors may be onerous enough to discourage further investment, which ultimately may make the tax worthless, or at least generate far …….

Source: https://techcrunch.com/2021/11/21/congress-must-clarify-how-the-infrastructure-bill-will-impact-cryptocurrency/

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