“Receipt of consideration in the form of
cryptocurrencies may not be equivalent to receipt of
money in convertible foreign exchange and hence any
export benefit by the Indian exporter would have a
direct impact. The RBI guidelines had earlier equated
even receipt of money in Indian rupee to be equivalent
to the foreign exchange and it will need to be seen how
clarification addresses the issue,” said Abhishek A
Rastogi, partner at law firm Khaitan and Co.
Take the example of a New Delhi-based resident who has
approached his tax advisor and claimed that he provided
graphic designing services to a company based in
Singapore.
He claimed that the company paid Rs 75 lakh for several
assignments during the year in cryptocurrencies.
The tax experts are now in a dilemma.
“There is no clarity on GST rate applicable as the
question is whether there is any supply of services
happening in the first place. Secondly, all the
cryptocurrency transactions between such taxpayers and
the companies that are paying have to be cross verified
to make sure that this is not a conduit for anything
that’s disallowed under Indian legal system,” said
Gaurav Mehta, founder of Catax, a cryptocurrency tax
consultancy firm.
Insiders tell ET that the government could be looking to
come out with clarity on the GST applicable on such
transactions.
Some senior government officials had reached out to well
known cryptocurrency tax advisors in this regard and
sought suggestions only two weeks back.
The finance minister had in February introduced a 30%
income tax on returns from digital currencies.
The government also introduced a 1% TDS on digital
assets. The government has, however, not used the word
‘cryptocurrency’ in the guidelines announced in the
budget but virtual digital assets.
The government has now even provided additional
clarifications that profit and loss across crypto assets
will be disallowed.
Tax on cryptocurrencies or virtual digital assets
announced on Tuesday is set to create more problems for
investors as they will now have to not just cough up
additional taxes but may not be able to set off losses
from such coins against returns, ET first wrote on
February 3.
So the question is this: If an investor made Rs 1 lakh
from Bitcoin trading but lost Rs 1 lakh from Ethereum
trading, what would be the taxation?
Many tax experts claim that in such a situation, the tax
will be Rs 30,000—at 30%—and investors will not be able
to set off losses from Ethereum trading, ET wrote. The
latest clarification seems to have confirmed this
hypothesis
Source:::THE ECONOMIC TIMES ,
dated 24/03/2022.