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The director of the OECDâs tax center has revealed that the organization expects to release a tax reporting standard for crypto assets by the end of next year.
Pascal Saint-Amans, the director of the OECDâs Centre for Tax Policy and Administration, has asserted that the 37-nation organization will introduce a common reporting standard, or CRS, for crypto assets in 2021.
According to Law360, Amans stated that the crypto tax standard âwould be roughly equivalent to the CRSâ developed by the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development to combat tax evasion.
The director attributed the likely development of the crypto tax CRS to a desire to introduce stronger standards surrounding crypto regulations among its member-countries:
âThe timeline to deliver is probably â21, sometime in â21, because there is an appetite by all countries now."
Amansâ comments come days after the European Commission launched a process to amend and extend its tax evasion laws pertinent to crypto assets. The proposal was published on Nov. 23, with the commission set to receive public feedback on the initiative until Dec. 21. The new laws are expected to be introduced during the third quarter of 2021.
Despite the action taken by the commission, Amans expects that the OECD will establish crypto tax standards before Europe, describing the policy arena as an âopportunity for the EU to align with [the OECDâs] standard.â
However, uncoordinated simultaneous development could result in the OECD and Europe establishing particular policy positions that contradict each other â threatening to create regulatory challenges for the OECDâs European members, as has been recently seen concerning the taxation of digital services.
Amans dismissed these concerns, however, asserting that any proposal from the OECD would be âcomplementaryâ to EU regulations. Speaking to Law360, a European Commissi spokesperson indicated the organization is working âin parallelâ with the OECD to âavoid overlaps or inconsistencies to the extent possible.â
âAt the same time the specific situation of the EU and its member states needs to be taken into account,â they added.
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