Senators Seek To Amend Bitcoin Reporting Changes In Infrastructure Bill
A bipartisan team of US senators is introducing a bill to clarify what entities should report cryptocurrency transactions to the IRS.A bipartisan team of U.S. senators is introducing a bill to restrict tax reporting rule...
A bipartisan team of US senators is introducing a bill to clarify what entities should report cryptocurrency transactions to the IRS.
- A bipartisan team of U.S. senators is introducing a bill to restrict tax reporting rules present in the infrastructure bill, which is set to become law today.
- The infrastructure bill’s text extends cash-focused section 6050I to contemplate cryptocurrency transactions.
- “The new bill includes a provision that would make it retroactive to the infrastructure bill’s signing,” Bloomberg reported.
U.S. senators Ron Wyden, chairman of the Senate Finance Committee, and Cynthia Lummis are introducing a bill to amend tax reporting requirements in the infrastructure legislation set to become law on November 15, Bloomberg reported.
“The new bill, the text of which was obtained by Bloomberg News, seeks to override a provision in the infrastructure legislation that cryptocurrency investors say is overly broad and would stifle growth of digital currencies,” per the report.
In September, a tax change introduced in the infrastructure bill would require U.S. persons receiving over $10,000 in bitcoin and cryptocurrency to report the sender’s personal information to the Internal Revenue Service (IRS), extending the provisions of section 6050I that currently only apply to cash transactions.
“Our bill makes clear that the new reporting requirements do not apply to individuals developing blockchain technology and wallets,” Wyden said in a statement, per the report. “This will protect American innovation while at the same time ensuring those who buy and sell cryptocurrency pay the taxes they already owe.”
The new bill seeks to restrict the interpretation of the entities these requirements would apply to and protect innovators such as miners and developers in the U.S.
“It’s not yet clear when the crypto reporting bill could come up for a vote, or if it could be included in other year-end legislative packages in coming weeks. The bill includes a provision that would make it retroactive to the infrastructure bill’s signing,” per the report.
Original source
Read on Bitcoin MagazineRelated market context
Japan’s Lower House Passes Sweeping Bill to Regulate Crypto Like Stocks, Opening a Path to Lower Taxes and ETFs
Japan’s lower house passed a sweeping bill on Thursday to regulate cryptocurrencies like stocks, a structural shift for one of the...
SpaceX’s $75 Billion IPO at $135 Sparks Fresh Crypto Bets
Key Takeaways: SpaceX’s IPO was priced at $135 a share to raise a record $75 billion. Offering will value the company at about $1....
Ripple chases AI’s machine economy as XRPL stablecoins near $1 billion
Stablecoin liquidity on the XRP Ledger (XRPL) has nearly doubled over the past month, putting the network within reach of a $1 bil...
Elon Musk’s SpaceX IPO fever sparks $1 billion crypto bet before Nasdaq debut
Crypto traders have turned Elon Musk’s expected SpaceX listing into a round-the-clock proxy market, pushing more than $1 billion t...
Japan's Lower House Passes Bill Moving Crypto Under Securities Law, Opening Path to ETFs and 20% Tax Rate
Japan's lower house passed a bill on Thursday that reclassifies cryptocurrencies as financial instruments under the country's secu...
JPMorgan Says the Debasement Trade Retreat Has ‘Accelerated’ for Bitcoin as June ETF Outflows Reach $2.1 Billion
The debasement trade that fueled demand for bitcoin and gold through much of this year is unwinding, and the retreat has accelerat...