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by 3np
1947 days ago
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I'm not sure what country you're referring to. In most jurisdictions I'm familiar with, if you exchange cash currencies and buy something (classic example; a cup of coffee), you are not expected to enumerate that transaction in your tax statement and calculate acquisition cost and liquidation P&L for each individual transactions. For bitcoin, you do (again, highly depending on country). This is the difference between classifying it as an asset or a currency. You may still be liable for taxes on your forex trading, but it's not the same kind of capital gains as for other asset classes. |
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I'll give you an example that pre-dates bitcoin:
There are U.S. Gold coins that have denominations, for example $50
https://www.moneymetals.com/images/products/1oz-gold-eagle-r...
People have tried to pay others with these coins arguing that the face value is $50, so the income tax should be $50, and not the $1500 or whatever an ounce of gold was worth at the time. Guess what? They didn't get away with it. See:
https://www.justice.gov/sites/default/files/tax/legacy/2014/...