According to Japan’s tax authorities, the average value of undeclared income in crypto fell by 19% in 2022.
On Nov. 24, the Japanese National Tax Agency (NTA) released its yearly summary of tax investigations. The 13-page document also contains data on the probe into crypto tax evasion.
The NTA initiated 615 investigations into citizens’ crypto holdings based on their tax declarations for 2022, up from 444 in 2021. In 548 cases, the agency found tax violations, a 35% increase over 2021, which had 405 crypto tax evasion cases.
However, the average value of undeclared crypto holdings dropped from 36,590,000 Japanese yen (around $245,000) in 2021 to 30,770,000 yen ($206,000) in 2022.
In August, Japanese regulators, including the NTA and the Financial Services Agency (FSA), confirmed that citizens would be spared from a capital gains tax on unrealized gains in crypto. That means they will not have to pay around 35% of taxes on those crypto assets stored without trade operations during the fiscal year.
This month, Japan joined a list of almost 50 nations that pledged to “swiftly transpose” the Crypto-Asset Reporting Framework — a new international standard on the automatic exchange of information between tax authorities — into their domestic law systems.
Conservative Party leader Kemi Badenoch has called on Sir Keir Starmer to sack Treasury minister Tulip Siddiq over allegations she lived in properties linked to allies of her aunt, Sheikh Hasina, the deposed prime minister of Bangladesh.
It comes after the current Bangladeshi leader, Muhammad Yunus, said London properties used by Ms Siddiq should be investigated.
He told the Sunday Timesthe properties should be handed back to his government if they were acquired through “plain robbery”.
Tory leader Ms Badenoch said: “It’s time for Keir Starmer to sack Tulip Siddiq.
“He appointed his personal friend as anti-corruption minister and she is accused herself of corruption.
“Now the government of Bangladesh is raising serious concerns about her links to the regime of Sheikh Hasina.”
Ms Siddiq insists she has “done nothing wrong”.
Her aunt was ousted from office in August following an uprising against her 20-year leadership and fled to India.
On the same day, the prime minister said: “Tulip Siddiq has acted entirely properly by referring herself to the independent adviser, as she’s now done, and that’s why we brought into being the new code.
“It’s to allow ministers to ask the adviser to establish the facts, and yes, I’ve got confidence in her, and that’s the process that will now be happening.”