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Topic: Turkey is eyeing finalization of taxing cryptocurrencies by next year (Read 108 times)

legendary
Activity: 1736
Merit: 4270
Türkiye is not Europe and America, where tax laws are respected. There are a lot of Russians in Turkey and all private exchanges work the same way as shadow exchangers in Moscow. No taxes and no reports. If you come to a tourist city like Antalya, you can easily buy or sell your cryptocurrencies and even be able to pay for the rent of an apartment.
sr. member
Activity: 406
Merit: 443
High taxes are an indirect encouragement for you to HODLINGgg, or at least to think several times before selling, and may lead some to evade paying taxes by incorrectly reporting profits, but it is a strategy that has proven to fail in reducing dealing with cryptocurrencies, especially since some may choose to continue trading because of free money when trading bitcoin.

legendary
Activity: 2828
Merit: 6108
Jambler.io
Don't hold your breath, it's Turkey and Erdogan we talk about:

In my opinion, crypto taxation would be a great challenge for the government in tracking our transactions especially when it involves the cryptocurrencies that we have in our non-custodial wallets. Usually capital gains and/or realized income would be the main basis of computing our taxes when converting cryptocurrencies to fiat money.

That's what they are aiming also, they don't give a damn on the coins you hold in your wallet they are targeting specifically exchanges and capital gains, and for a trader you simply have no way out of this, let's not even mention DEX, it's not there were the real money is made, it's all in CEX and they know they can grab that data with a single click.

Turkey is going in the wrong direction. With one of the highest inflation rates in the world, they first banned payments with cryptocurrencies, and, as it usually happens, as people skipped the ban they have realized that it is better to regulate them and try to tax them. The problem is that if you put high taxes you incentivize people not to declare. If instead of 30% they put a 5% tax almost everyone would declare because for how cheap it is it is not worth getting into a potential problem with the tax authorities, but with how disastrous Turkey's monetary policy is going I am not surprised.

There is only one flaw in your reasoning, you assume that if you tax something by just 5% you will have a flow of grateful citizens who will be on January 1st on the stairs of the IRS to pay up. I don't think there is another region in the world that with the same income and education has the same hate for paying tax and the same affinity for tax evasion as southern Europe and that part of the middle east, if it's one thing Greece and Turkey have in commons is their hate for paying a single dime in tax, and you can see what that has lead to in both cases.
legendary
Activity: 1736
Merit: 4270
Turkey to toughen law on crypto assets - minister
ANKARA, Nov 1 (Reuters) - Turkey is preparing new legislation covering crypto-assets to persuade an international crime watchdog to remove it from a "grey list" of countries that have taken insufficient action to prevent money laundering and terrorist financing.

The Financial Action Task Force (FATF) downgraded Turkey to a so-called grey list in 2021. Addressing a parliamentary commission late on Tuesday, Finance Minister Mehmet Simsek said a FATF report found Turkey fully compliant with all but one of the watchdog's 40 standards.

A lot of things are going wrong in Turkey at the moment.
I think new legislations in the financial sector are their smallest problem.

As long as this government,and dictatorship is in place, and they keep supporting terrorist groups like Hamas and trying to call all Muslims to "fight all the Jews", it doesn't matter what they are doing regarding crypto. It will have 0 influence on bitcoin in general I think.

Sooner or later this will end really bad.  Cry

It is better to avoid politics, because there will be a lot of counter-news about the bombing of hospitals.
In such a situation, all countries will be forced to raise taxes and look for additional sources of budget replenishment. And whose economies collapse faster, those countries will be among the losers. We live in an era of change.
jr. member
Activity: 36
Merit: 1
Crypto taxation is a challenge for governments, but regulation is better than a ban. Governments should focus on regulating intermediaries and taxing capital gains and realized income at a reasonable rate, while allowing people to hold and use cryptocurrencies without disclosing their identities. This would create a fair and balanced regulatory environment that fosters innovation and adoption.
hero member
Activity: 574
Merit: 663
Top Crypto Casino
Turkey to toughen law on crypto assets - minister
ANKARA, Nov 1 (Reuters) - Turkey is preparing new legislation covering crypto-assets to persuade an international crime watchdog to remove it from a "grey list" of countries that have taken insufficient action to prevent money laundering and terrorist financing.

The Financial Action Task Force (FATF) downgraded Turkey to a so-called grey list in 2021. Addressing a parliamentary commission late on Tuesday, Finance Minister Mehmet Simsek said a FATF report found Turkey fully compliant with all but one of the watchdog's 40 standards.

A lot of things are going wrong in Turkey at the moment.
I think new legislations in the financial sector are their smallest problem.

As long as this government,and dictatorship is in place, and they keep supporting terrorist groups like Hamas and trying to call all Muslims to "fight all the Jews", it doesn't matter what they are doing regarding crypto. It will have 0 influence on bitcoin in general I think.

Sooner or later this will end really bad.  Cry
legendary
Activity: 1708
Merit: 1615
#SWGT CERTIK Audited
Turkey to toughen law on crypto assets - minister
ANKARA, Nov 1 (Reuters) - Turkey is preparing new legislation covering crypto-assets to persuade an international crime watchdog to remove it from a "grey list" of countries that have taken insufficient action to prevent money laundering and terrorist financing.

The Financial Action Task Force (FATF) downgraded Turkey to a so-called grey list in 2021. Addressing a parliamentary commission late on Tuesday, Finance Minister Mehmet Simsek said a FATF report found Turkey fully compliant with all but one of the watchdog's 40 standards.
legendary
Activity: 2170
Merit: 1789
which is quite high compared to traditional financial transactions according to what I read here .
I can't read the full content, but is this draft the same thing as the document released on the latest news?[1] I can't really read it since it is in Turkish, but a quick search doesn't show the 15% number (unless my browser fucks up and failed to search the whole document). I might be wrong, but it seems like they are still open and researching further on the details.

[1] https://www.resmigazete.gov.tr/eskiler/2023/10/20231025M1-1.pdf
legendary
Activity: 3024
Merit: 1496
Well slowly all other countries will start imposing tax on Bitcoin. But it will be very interesting to see how they are going to track it. Surely they cannot impose taxes on Bitcoin transactions, rather they will try to track any conversion into Fiat through the banking channel. That's how other countries are texting cryptocurrency.

But one good thing is going to happen, probably after a structured framework a lot of merchants might become interested in accepting Bitcoin payment. But we are yet to see this.
legendary
Activity: 1372
Merit: 2013
Turkey is going in the wrong direction. With one of the highest inflation rates in the world, they first banned payments with cryptocurrencies, and, as it usually happens, as people skipped the ban they have realized that it is better to regulate them and try to tax them. The problem is that if you put high taxes you incentivize people not to declare. If instead of 30% they put a 5% tax almost everyone would declare because for how cheap it is it is not worth getting into a potential problem with the tax authorities, but with how disastrous Turkey's monetary policy is going I am not surprised.
legendary
Activity: 1736
Merit: 4270
The Turkish economy has a very large share of shadow exports. Although sanctions have been introduced against Russia, a lot of goods still come from Turkey and payment for these goods also includes cryptocurrencies. So any tightening of legislation could harm the Turkish economy, which already has many problems. And in Turkey, just like in Russia, there are many laws that are not respected.
sr. member
Activity: 574
Merit: 308
Is this supposed to be a positive development or otherwise? Because this seems like a plan or trap that Turkish government is trying to discourage crypto speculation and encourage more traditional investment because the proposed tax rate is between 15% and 30%, which is quite high compared to traditional financial transactions according to what I read here . Although it has not been approved but I don't expect anything less. The Turkish government has been considering imposing a tax on cryptocurrency transactions since at least from 2021 And from what you posted, it seems that they're getting closer to finalizing this tax. If it's approved it would make Turkey one of the first countries in the world to impose a tax on crypto transactions. However, we are watching to see how this tax would be implemented and enforced.
hero member
Activity: 2254
Merit: 658
Revolutionized copy gaming platform
Source: https://cryptonews.com/news/turkey-projects-finalization-of-cryptocurrency-taxes-by-next-year.htm

To further strengthening the regulation within the country, the Turkish government is now projecting to finalize crypto taxes sometime next year.

However, they did not mention in the article yet about the percentage of tax that will be imposed on cryptocurrencies converting to fiat in any regulated bank, digital bank, remittance or so. India's crypto taxation currently stands at 30% which is somewhat "too much" in the eyes of many.

In my opinion, crypto taxation would be a great challenge for the government in tracking our transactions especially when it involves the cryptocurrencies that we have in our non-custodial wallets. Usually capital gains and/or realized income would be the main basis of computing our taxes when converting cryptocurrencies to fiat money.

I believe regulation is far more better than just outlawing or outright banning them them but a double-edged sword for decentralization, data ownership and user privacy no matter which country you are in as they are aiming to co-exist with cryptocurrencies leading to massive adoption.
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