Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Bitcoin, taxes and infrastruc­ture bill

- Marcy Gordon CHARLES KRUPA/AP FILE

WASHINGTON – What does Bitcoin have to do with roads and bridges?

A lot, right now in Congress. One way lawmakers propose to pay for the $1 trillion infrastruc­ture bill the Senate approved Tuesday is by imposing tax-reporting requiremen­ts for cryptocurr­ency brokers, the way stockbroke­rs report their customers’ sales to the IRS. It could open the way for tighter regulation of cryptocurr­ency – something the Biden administra­tion is moving toward as it also pushes for tax compliance.

The plan could raise about $28 billion in revenue over 10 years, congressio­nal accountant­s estimate.

So, currency you can’t hold in your hand would effectively pay for roads, bridges, water systems, internet broadband access and shoring up the electrical grid, what President Joe Biden called “a generation­al investment” on par with building the transconti­nental railroad in the 1800s or the interstate highway system in the ’50s. That’s testament to the explosive growth of cryptocurr­encies in recent years – an enticing potential revenue source – and the mounting push by some government officials to put new reins around a largely unregulate­d market.

After weeks of wrangling, the Senate passed the bipartisan infrastruc­ture package in a 69-30 vote. It now moves to the House.

A look at the situation:

Question: What’s the story with cryptocurr­ency?

Answer: The market for cryptocurr­encies has ballooned to an estimated $1.8 trillion. They’re basically lines of computer code that are digitally signed each time they travel from one holder to the next. Not tied to banks or government­s, they allow users to spend or receive money anonymousl­y. That appeals to libertaria­ns, off-the-grid types and risk-taking millennial­s who believe the financial system is rigged.

But it’s also favored by internatio­nal criminals, money launderers, drug dealers and ransomware hackers.

The most widely traded cryptocurr­ency is Bitcoin, now worth around $46,000 each, down from a high in April of about $64,800. It’s notoriousl­y volatile, in some instances spiking or plunging on public pronouncem­ents by Elon Musk, the provocativ­e Tesla Inc. CEO. Some businesses now accept Bitcoin as payment. Other well-known cryptocurr­encies include Ethereum, Dogecoin, Ripple and Litecoin. All told, there are thousands. Bitcoin and others can be bought and sold on exchanges with U.S. dollars and other national currencies.

Q: Where do government officials stand?

A: On both sides of the coin.

Some lawmakers see cryptocurr­ency as a font of technologi­cal innovation, especially in the developmen­t of blockchain, the digital ledger that records transactio­ns.

Top U.S. regulators, on the other hand, are flashing danger signs. Gary Gensler, the chairman of the Securities and Exchange Commission appointed by Biden, said last week that investors need more protection in the cryptocurr­ency market, which he called “rife with fraud, scams and abuse” and “like the Wild West.” While the SEC has won dozens of cases against crypto fraudsters, Gensler said the agency needs more authority from Congress – and more funding – to regulate the market.

The Federal Reserve, meanwhile, is considerin­g developing its own digital currency pegged to the U.S. dollar. A socalled digital dollar could enable faster payments among banks, consumers and businesses.

“You’ve got federal agencies not talking on the same page,” says Suzanne Lynch, a professor at Utica College who focuses on financial crime. “It’s so gray right now.”

Q: What’s the connection with the infrastruc­ture bill?

A: The debate over cryptocurr­ency landed in the middle of the Senate’s work on the massive infrastruc­ture package. An earlier plan to pay for the legislatio­n, by bolstering IRS enforcemen­t to crack down on tax cheating by individual­s and businesses, went down as Republican­s objected to expanding the agency’s reach. That would have brought in an estimated $100 billion over 10 years.

Going back to the drawing board on revenue raisers, the plan was hatched for stricter tax-reporting requiremen­ts for cryptocurr­ency brokers. The estimated $28 billion it would generate over a decade is only about a quarter of what the IRS crackdown proposal envisaged. But it’s still the biggest revenue raiser of several in the infrastruc­ture bill.

It raised objections from some senators and unleashed an opposition lobbying blitz from the cryptocurr­ency industry as well as internet freedom advocacy groups.

The provision defines brokers too broadly, opponents say, potentiall­y stifling innovation by unfairly putting new tax-reporting obligation­s on software developers and crypto “miners” – users who create coins by lending computing power to verify other users’ transactio­ns and receive coins in exchange. Those people don’t have access to cryptocurr­ency users’ data the IRS would be collecting, opponents say.

Opponents brought forward amendments to the provision and a compromise emerged. But it failed to muster Senate approval, pushing the debate over cryptocurr­ency, taxes and brokers to the House.

Q: What’s the situation now with cryptocurr­ency and taxes?

A: Some cryptocurr­ency brokers already report transactio­ns to the IRS, though most don’t, experts say. Brokers place buy and sell orders for users on the cryptocurr­ency exchanges.

The exchanges are required to collect personal identifyin­g informatio­n from users and report their annual activity to the IRS.

The IRS defines cryptocurr­ency as “property” similar to stocks or gold. That means you pay capital-gains tax when you sell it or cash it in at a profit.

 ??  ?? The $1 trillion infrastruc­ture bill the Senate has approved includes a plan to help pay for it by imposing taxreporti­ng requiremen­ts for cryptocurr­ency brokers.
The $1 trillion infrastruc­ture bill the Senate has approved includes a plan to help pay for it by imposing taxreporti­ng requiremen­ts for cryptocurr­ency brokers.

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