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India’s Biggest Tax Filing Platform is Helping Investors File on Bitcoin Gains

India’s biggest tax filing platform is helping investors file on bitcoin gains

India’s Biggest Tax Filing Platform is Helping Investors File on Bitcoin Gains

India’s biggest tax filing platform is helping investors file on bitcoin gains
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A new partnership between major cryptocurrency exchange Zebpay and tax filing platform Cleartax aims to assist cryptocurrency investors file taxes on capital gains from their crypto assets.

As Indian authorities continue to be perfectly ambiguous over guidelines or regulations for cryptocurrency adopters and the industry respectively – bitcoin and cryptocurrencies are neither legal nor illegal, nor regulated in India – the country’s official taxation department is perfectly clear on its foray to collect taxes from individuals in the country.

For context, India’s income tax (IT) department visited at least nine major exchanges across the country in a coordinated operation in December to conduct ‘surveys’ to gather data of KYC-adhering traders’ and investors’ transactions, bank accounts and more.

A recent report had tax officials point to a total of $3.5 billion in transactions and investments by Indian citizens during a 17-month period up to 2018. As a result, the IT department has reportedly sent out notices to “tens of thousands” of investors, reminding them to file their taxes on profits gained from their crypto earnings. Other reports have suggested that the IT department is to issue notices to up to 500,000 investors across the country.

However, a startling lack of any tax filing guidelines, norms or instructions by the taxation authority has only added to the confusion, leaving investors unsure about declaring their holdings in a tax return or pay taxes on capital gains.

A new partnership between India’s largest tax-filing platform, Cleartax, and major Indian cryptocurrency exchange Zebpay is seeking to bring some clarity in helping investors with filing taxes on their cryptocurrency profits and enabling taxpayers to better understand taxation laws on cryptocurrencies.

“[W]e aim to clear the air around [the taxation of] digital currencies,” said Cleartax founder and chief executive Archit Gupta on announcing two new services in partnership with the exchange.

The ‘Cryptocurrency Taxation Advisory’ plan is described as a service that will help crypto investors and traders with all queries related to taxation on trading and the sale of cryptocurrencies. A separate ‘Tax Filing for Gains from Cryptocurrency’ service aims to assist individuals and businesses in filing income tax returns on profits or losses from the sale of cryptocurrencies.

With Indian authorities explicitly refusing to recognize bitcoin as legal tender, a number of major Indian banks, both public and private, have frozen bank accounts belonging to cryptocurrency exchanges in recent months. The move has severely dented trading volumes and activity among exchanges despite the lack of any clear legislation or regulation for the sector.

Featured image from Shutterstock.

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Published at Wed, 28 Mar 2018 08:13:19 +0000

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Bitkan Experiment Shows Japan is No Bitcoin Mecca on the Ground

Bitkan has said the consumer bitcoin scene in Japan is still “difficult to use” after staff conducted an investigation in Tokyo.


Bitkan: Japan bitcoin Payments Still ‘Difficult’

The decentralized trading platform, which is headquartered in China but looking to expand into the Japanese market, also released a documentary film about using bitcoin in the country in 2017.

Last month, Bitkan organized a Tokyo Bitcoin meetup which saw some of the largest ever audiences debate the local scene as well as current technological issues facing the bitcoin ecosystem. Roger Ver and Jihan Wu were among the attendees.

“We used Coinmap to search advertisements of businesses accepting bitcoin,” operations director Sandy Liang told Bitcoinist in emailed comments about the research.

“These places had a ‘bitcoin accepted’ sticker, and where it was possible to use it to pay, staff appeared familiar with the payment process.”

bitcoin’s Mixed Fortunes Evident In Payment Landscape

Japan hit the headlines in February following the temporary moratorium on Chinese bitcoin trading, becoming the world’s largest bitcoin exchange market.

As reports heralded a total of 4500 outlets accepting the virtual currency, reactions from users on the ground struck a decidedly different note, stating that in reality bitcoin payments were almost unnoticeable.

Liang shared this view following Bitkan marketing director Ruby Chen’s attempt to live off Bitcoin for 72 hours in Tokyo but remained positive about the future.

“We have to say that it’s not very convenient to use bitcoin in Tokyo for covering all expenses, compared with fiat. For now, it’s really hard to live only on bitcoin,” she said.

“However, it’s getting easier and easier. The growing number of bitcoin ATMs, for instance, allows the option of converting BTC to yen as an alternative.”

She added that the depth of incentives for consumers to pay using the virtual currency was also lacking. Discounts and other marketing schemes were not in evidence at all, making the idea of transitioning to a notionally more convenient, empowering payment method appear daunting.

Big Business Paving Way For Change

Meanwhile, the country’s cryptocurrency exchanges are busy laying the foundations for what could be a seismic shift in attitudes in the coming years.

BitFlyer and Coincheck, both major market players in Japan, have recently announced partnerships with big business specifically with the aim of expanding the number of merchants with whom consumers may pay using bitcoin.

The former is working with Japanese economics giant Bic Camera to roll out bitcoin payments across its empire, with a trial initially limited to two flagship stores in Tokyo. Customers are able to pay up to 10,000 yen ($900) in bitcoin.

Coincheck meanwhile is seeking to expand the merchant base even further – by up to 260,000 – through allowing merchants using PoS app AirRegi to also accept bitcoin.

Such an expansion would place bitcoin on par with extant fiat payment app acceptance numbers, the most popular being Suica and Edy with up to 470,000 locations.

[Note: This is a sponsored article]

What do you think about Japan’s bitcoin journey? Let us know in the comments below!


Images courtesy of Shutterstock. BitKan

The post Bitkan Experiment Shows Japan is No Bitcoin Mecca on the Ground appeared first on Bitcoinist.com.