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    Author Topic: Bitcoin Sales tax coming to Singapore.  (Read 2445 times)
    meAbdullah (OP)
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    March 14, 2014, 10:16:34 AM
     #1

    Hello,

    The Monetary Authority of Singapore(MAS), the central bank of Singapore, has just announced it would be regulating bitcoin activity treating it as a virtual commodity rather than as a virtual currency. Singapore currently has a 7% GST tax which is a consumption tax. As bitcoin is not a usual commodity, a strict implementation of GST cannot be applied. It is not expected that there will be bitcoin mining in Singapore. As there is no way to tell if a sales is local consumption (for which GST is specifically aimed at) or for export, I think the only reasonable way is a flat transaction tax, a sort of luxury tax or a 'warning' tax so that in the event when speculators got burnt when Bitcoin collapsed (When ?), the people won't complain and appeal to the government to direct the Bitcoin 'institutions' to indemnify them for losses - just as some over 65 people claimed they were stupid and ignorant when they incurred losses buying into Lehman brother's products. So the tax may be the same 7% as a start. 

    For industry players, there should be no implementation difficulties. Bitcoin exchanges could just absorb the 7% in their spread. But of course, business would run from regions with higher tax to region with lower sales tax. I doubt there need be any bitcoin havens with no tax. If there is the first country to tax bitcoin transactions, no sane government need ever ban bitcoin. Bitcoin in itself is no evil as simple regulations would ensure that money laundering would be easily controlled as with normal banking transactions. In fact bitcoin will evolved to be a good source of tax revenue if it trades at 650,000 USD/BTC - so why ban it!


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