By Mat Di Salvo
3 min read
Chairman of the House Financial Services Committee Patrick McHenry today claimed that the Biden Administration was trying to "kill" the digital asset industry in the U.S. with its new proposal for crypto tax regulations.
McHenry (R-NC) said in a statement Friday that the new proposal was lacking clarity and urged for clearer rules.
Top cryptocurrency exchanges may soon have to report customer information to the Internal Service Revenue (IRS) under the rules proposed by the Biden Administration on Friday.
"The Biden Administration must end its effort to kill the digital asset ecosystem in the U.S. and work with Congress to finally deliver clear rules of the road for this industry," said McHenry, adding that any "proposed rule must be narrow, tailored, and clear."
The proposed rules from the U.S. Department of the Treasury and the IRS aim to target crypto investing tax dodgers.
American taxpayers currently owe tax on gains, but this can be a difficult and expensive process. These new rules, Friday's statement said, make the process easier to "close the tax gap."
"This is part of a broader effort at Treasury to close the tax gap, address the tax evasion risks posed by digital assets, and help ensure that everyone plays by the same set of rules," the Treasury Department announcement said.
The new rules would ask platforms that facilitate the buying and selling of digital assets, also known as crypto brokers, to track and report key information—as stock and bond brokers currently do.
The proposed rules would also target decentralized exchanges (DEXs). Such crypto exchanges do not collect customer data and require no personal details from users—unlike Binance or Coinbase.
And some have already said that this would hurt the decentralized finance (DeFi) industry.
General counsel for Delphi Labs Gabriel Shapiro said on Twitter that the proposed rules "could be a devastating blow to the use of P2P protocols" in the U.S. as it would ask operators of such exchanges to collect data from users.
While Kristin Smith, CEO of Washington, D.C.-based nonprofit Blockchain Association, told Decrypt that "given the reporting requirements, a platform or protocol would need to centralize in order to comply, eliminating all benefits of decentralization including security and transparency."
McHenry is vocal about the crypto industry and has clashed with Democrats over how to regulate the it. Last month, he urged a stablecoin regulation bill go ahead after it hit a wall due to criticisms from Democrats.
The proposed regulations are open for public comment and feedback until October 30.
Editor's Note: Post updated to add more recent comment from Kristin Smith.
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