The US Treasury Wants $10K+ Crypto Transfers to Be Reported to the IRS
The government is concerned about tax evasion via digital currencies.
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Cryptocurrencies pose “a significant detection problem by facilitating illegal activity” such as tax evasion, according to the U.S. Treasury, which .
The IRS has already started tracking taxpayers who own cryptocurrencies and can legally of tax evaders.
The Treasury’s proposal is also part of Biden’s comprehensive tax compliance plan, which aims to close the gap between taxes paid and taxes owed. That difference, which totaled $600 billion in 2019, could balloon to $7 trillion if not addressed.
Related: Getting Tech off the Ground: From Crowdfunding to Cryptocurrency
Cryptocurrencies have skyrocketed in the past three years as entrepreneurs and institutional investors have piled in, using the digital currency market to hedge against inflation. The market cap is now about $2 trillion according to .
But pushes for regulation have whipsawed price levels.
On Wednesday, Bitcoin plunged 30% after China banned financial firms from offering crypto services. The broad-based selling even triggered an .
Related: What You Need To Know About Crypto Airdrops
Just last week Bitcoin lost billions in the market after Tesla announced it would as payment, on account of the cryptocurrency’s harmful environmental impact. Tesla did, however, say it wasn’t selling any Bitcoin holdings.
Meanwhile, officials are looking to beef up the IRS’s control further by investing $80 billion in the agency over the next 10 years.
The funding will create 5,000 new enforcement jobs and cover an upgrade of the agency’s “outdated” IT systems.
Cryptocurrencies pose “a significant detection problem by facilitating illegal activity” such as tax evasion, according to the U.S. Treasury, which .
The IRS has already started tracking taxpayers who own cryptocurrencies and can legally of tax evaders.
The Treasury’s proposal is also part of Biden’s comprehensive tax compliance plan, which aims to close the gap between taxes paid and taxes owed. That difference, which totaled $600 billion in 2019, could balloon to $7 trillion if not addressed.