Kanwal Prakash Singh, Head of Quant with CoinDCX said
that any platform which provides infrastructure for
mining is a standard case of service providers. Miners
provide a service of “verifying and processing the
transaction” usually by solving a “cryptographic
puzzle”. This service is rewarded in terms of the Token
(Bitcoin or BTC, Ethereum or ETH) depending on the token
that is mined. Reward for miner should be treated as
service fee and may be considered for GST.
“This GST maybe charged on the VWAP (Volume weighted
average price) of token in ETH-INR pairs,” he said.
In case of Non-Fungible Token (NFT), Singh said platform
for buy and sell of such instrument should be treated as
service provider. Commission earned for listing NFT
should attract GST. “Any sale of NFT may be treated as a
“Good” after all NFT is similar to a virtual good,” he
said.
Singh said that not much mining is done in India as
electricity costs and huge infrastructure investment
(computing machinery and its wear and tear) makes it
unviable and any tax will make it very expensive.
Exchanges minting and creating their own tokens maybe
asked to pay GST at the moment of first sale (primary
issue) - this may disincentivize on creation of new
tokens by exchanges. On the positive side, a GST on
primary issue will embark upon issuers to not create
bogus tokens and bring more maturity in the tokens. This
should also contain and limit the fraudulent activities,
he said.
Samir Kapadia, Partner (Indirect Tax), Nangia Andersen
LLP, cryptocurrencies use various times-tamping schemes
to ‘prove’ the validity of transactions added to the
blockchain ledger, without the need for a trusted third
party. In cryptocurrency networks, the activity of
‘mining’ implies the validation data blocks and adding
transaction records to a public record i.e. the
blockchain ledger. For this effort, successful miners
are rewarded with new cryptocurrency. Thus, one may say
it is an activity carried on for a consideration, and
hence, cryptocurrency mining could be characterised as a
supply of service.
“While on one hand levying tax may have the effect of
increasing the transaction cost, on the other, it will
bring about certainty and legitimacy to the transactions
involving mining of cryptocurrency. Given that while
levying tax, the Government will have to clearly specify
what, when, who and on how much tax is payable, more
importantly (it should be) who is the person liable to
be taxed,” he said.
Sathvik Vishwanath, co-founder, Unocoin. said crypto
mining is not profitable in India on a day-to-day basis
due to higher electricity and internet charges and rent.
In fact, India would have less than one per cent of the
crypto miners across the world. But people don’t just
mine bitcoins, they also mine other currencies. Once in
a while, when the prices of these currencies shoot up,
it can be a profitable activity. As such, Indian
exchanges don’t play a role in mining. Anyone with a
supercomputer can do it. The role of exchanges come into
play when someone wants to liquidate the coins mined
into real money.
“But levying GST on crypto mining will be challenging as
there will be issues such as what price it was mined at
and liquidated at could be different. How far it can be
tracked or traced will also be a challenge. No one is
explicitly paying for the creation of the asset and
there is no seller for mined cryptos. There is also a
question of if the transaction fee obtained from mining
the transactions is a service and if GST should be paid
through reverse calculation mechanism,” he said.
Talking about the impact of GST, if levied, on mining,
Singh said it would further become expensive, although
not much mining is done in India as the electricity
costs and huge infrastructure investment make it
unviable. Exchanges minting and creating their own
tokens maybe asked to pay GST at the moment of first
sale (primary issue) which, in turn, may disincentivise
creation of new tokens by exchanges.
“On the positive side, a GST on primary issue will
embark upon issuers to not create bogus tokens and bring
more maturity in the tokens. This should also contain
and limit the fraudulent activities,” he said.
Source::: The Hindu Business Line ,
dated 08/02/2022.