The Biden administration has proposed requiring the collection of data on foreign cryptocurrency investors active in the U.S., aiming to bolster international cooperation to help in a broader crackdown on tax evasion.

The Treasury Department, in its “Greenbook” of revenue proposals released last Friday, proposed a requirement for cryptocurrency brokers, such as exchanges and hosted-wallet providers, to provide information to the IRS on foreign individuals indirectly holding accounts with them.

“They clearly feel that right now there’s a blind spot for foreign owners,” said Jorge Castro, a tax attorney at Miller & Chevalier Chartered who previously worked at the IRS and as a Democratic tax counsel on Capitol Hill. The proposal addresses “certain passive entities and their substantial foreign owners,” the Treasury said.

The U.S. could then provide that information to foreign governments and, in exchange, receive information on any U.S. individuals concealing cryptocurrency assets and dodging their U.S. tax liabilities by using offshore exchanges and wallet providers.

The move, which would require congressional legislation, is part of a campaign by President Joe Biden’s administration to strengthen tax enforcement to help pay for trillions of dollars of proposed longer-term spending programs. It also coincides with the Treasury’s engagement with counterparts around the world to set a global minimum tax for corporations.

Widening Concerns
Officials say cryptocurrencies have served as a significant contributor to the growing tax gap—the difference between taxes owed and actually paid on time—that Internal Revenue Service Commissioner Charles Rettig has estimated may exceed $1 trillion a year.

There may also be a cyber-security element. White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki said Wednesday that expanding analysis of cryptocurrencies is one of the steps the administration is taking to help curb cyber attacks.

The Greenbook proposal would be a continuation of information exchanges the U.S. already conducts with foreign governments to uncover U.S. citizens hiding assets offshore in undisclosed foreign bank accounts, said Charles Kolstad, a partner at international law firm Withers.

The Blockchain Association, whose members include trading platforms that would be subject to the new reporting requirement, declined to comment. Cryptocurrency exchanges Kraken and Coinbase didn’t return requests for comment.

The proposal to require reporting on foreign owners seems aimed at those who set up shell companies in the U.S. to transact in cryptocurrency, said former IRS Chief Counsel Michael Desmond, who’s now a partner at Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher LLP.

The IRS’s Criminal Investigation division has already been working with agencies in other countries—Australia, Canada, the U.K. and Netherlands—to pursue global tax cheats, including those using cryptocurrency. To the extent permitted under each country’s laws, the agencies share information and coordinate efforts.

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