The tax regulations of 2022 have resulted in trading volumes worth Rs 32,000 crore shifting to overseas exchanges last year. Yet, it appears unlikely that the government will budge to review its current stance
Much of the Indian government’s policymakers’ move to impose high taxes and clamp down on digital virtual asset trade has caused losses for the ecosystem.
Illustration: Chaitanya Dinesh Surpur
In the new year, retail investors and intermediaries operating in the cryptocurrency ecosystem must be wondering how much longer the trade needs hospital care to survive and recover to a state of well-being.
2022 was a year to forget for crypto: Bitcoin and ethereum prices fell near 60 percent in the year in a risk-averse environment; stablecoins TerraUSD and Luna collapsed; trading volumes at some of India’s leading crypto currency exchanges plunged by nearly 90 percent due to high taxes; and by the year-end the FTX exchange had filed for bankruptcy after a bank-type run and its founder Samuel Bankman-Fried faces conviction.
Much of the Indian government’s policymakers’ move to impose high taxes and clamp down on digital virtual asset trade has caused losses for the ecosystem. Technology policy think tank Esya Centre carried out an estimate of the impact of India’s tax policy on centralised virtual digital asset (VDA) exchanges. It revealed that there was a shift of a cumulative trade volume of around $3,852 million (about ₹32,000 crore) from domestic crypto exchanges to foreign ones during February to October 2022, following the announcement of a new tax regime in India.
Esya Centre, in its January 2023 report, has suggested that the government lower the current TDS rate on crypto transactions, like the securities transaction tax, given that the TDS mandate is also meant to enhance transaction tracking. “This will help curb the distortionary effect of TDS on the industry,” says Vikash Gautam, adjunct fellow at Esya Centre.
Also read: Cryptos: Against the wall but still battling
(This story appears in the 27 January, 2023 issue of Forbes India. To visit our Archives, click here.)