Crypto Blockchain Association Lobby Presents Tax Plan to Congress

Featured in:
abcd

The Blockchain Association has published its position on tax policy, arguing that “low dollar” cryptocurrency transfers should be exempt, but mining and staking should be taxed.

A US crypto lobby group has shared with Congress how it hopes crypto will be taxed and has met with House lawmakers working on a crypto tax bill to shape one of the industry’s top policy priorities.

sadasda

The Blockchain Association released its crypto tax policy positions on Tuesday, which called for stablecoins to be treated as cash for ordinary purchases and for a de minimis tax exemption on “low-dollar” crypto transactions.

It argued that tax reporting for “negligible gains or losses from routine transactions imposes disproportionate costs on individuals and overwhelms tax administration without meaningful revenue upside.”

The lobby also said it supports applying wash sale rules to digital assets, letting investors claim losses on sales even if they buy the same crypto back.

The Blockchain Association’s efforts come as lawmakers debate how crypto should be taxed.

Republican Senator Cynthia Lummis introduced a bill in July to tax-exempt some crypto transactions, which was met with opposition from Democratic Senator Elizabeth Warren.

Source: Blockchain Association

The Blockchain Association argued that tax reporting for digital assets should safeguard taxpayer privacy while still enabling effective enforcement against illicit crypto activities.

It also said that mining or staking activities should be subject to capital gains tax. 

Related: Dutch House of Representatives advances controversial 36% tax law

The organization met with White House officials earlier this month to advance market structure legislation that includes favorable stablecoin rewards provisions.

Warren opposes proposed crypto lax laws

Lummis crypto tax bill included several provisions that the Blockchain Association advocated for that faced strong opposition from Warren in October.

Warren argued that the de minimis exception proposal would cost the US $5.8 billion and slammed a proposal that would allow crypto investors to avoid reporting income from crypto transactions under $300. 

“If someone bought $300 worth of gold, or $300 worth of Apple stock, would they be required to report any income they made from those transactions?” she argued.

Magazine: DAT panic dumps 73,000 ETH, India’s crypto tax stays: Asia Express

[–>

Cointelegraph is committed to independent and limpid journalism. This news article has been produced in accordance with Cointelegraph’s Editorial Policy and is intended to provide precise and up-to-date information. Readers are encouraged to verify the information themselves. Read our Editorial Policy https://cointelegraph.com/editorial-policy

abcd
sadasda

Find us on

Latest articles

Related articles

See more articles

Solana Recovery (SOL) shows strength after breaking through the...

Aayush Jindal, a luminary in the world of financial markets, whose expertise spans over 15 distinguished years...

Odzyskiwanie hashrate’u Bitcoina sygnalizuje kolejny wzrost, mówi ekspert

Były dyrektor generalny CoinRoutes Dave Weisberger argumentował w poście X z 23 lutego, że odbicie hashrate’u Bitcoina...

ETH rebounds from 1.8 thousand dollars as multiple Ether...

Key takeaways:ETH futures liquidation reached $224 million after the price fell 9%, while the network's onchain activity...

Ethereum Price Maintains Key 5-Year Demand Area Among Hefty...

Ethereum's price is hovering near a critical long-term zone as whales shuffle billions of dollars in holdings,...

Empery Digital shareholder demands sale of over 4,000 Bitcoins,...

Empera Digital's main shareholder has called on the company to abandon its Bitcoin-centric strategy, sell its digital...

A multi-year XRP bull run that could change everything...

XRP is currently being traded without a clear bullish mood, however, several analysts believe that the token...