Report
Report
Report
Economics
References Committee
August 2015
The details of this licence are available on the Creative Commons website:
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Secretariat
Dr Kathleen Dermody, Secretary
Ms Penny Bear, Senior Research Officer
Ms Morana Kavgic, Administrative Officer (until 27 February 2015)
Ms Ashlee Hill, Administrative Officer (from 23 February 2015)
PO Box 6100
Parliament House
Canberra ACT 2600
Ph: 02 6277 3540
Fax: 02 6277 5719
E-mail: economics.sen@aph.gov.au
Internet: www.aph.gov.au/senate_economics
iii
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Membership of Committee
iii
vi
Abbreviations
ABA
ACC
ACCC
ADCCA
AFP
AFS licence
AML/CTF
AML/CTF Act
APCA
ASIC
ATO
AUSTRAC
CGT
DFAT
DVS
EU
European Union
FATF
FBT
FSI
GST
GST Act
KYC
RBA
VAT
UK
United Kingdom
xiii
Chapter 1
Introduction
1.1
On 2 October 2014, the Senate referred the matter of digital currency to the
Economics References Committee for inquiry and report by the first sitting day in
March 2015. 1 On 2 March 2015, the Senate granted an extension of time to report by
10 August 2015. 2
1.2
to:
Under its terms of reference, the committee was to give particular reference
(a)
payments sector,
(d)
Conduct of inquiry
1.3
The inquiry was established to examine how best to define digital currency
within the regulatory frameworks in order to support innovation and the needs of the
growing Australian digital currency industry. It comes at an important juncture in the
emergence of this new technology where there are both opportunities but also risks. A
number of overseas countries are also considering the use of digital currency, and this
inquiry is both timely and welcomed.
1.4
The committee advertised the inquiry on its website and in the Australian. It
also wrote to relevant stakeholders and interested parties inviting submissions. The
committee received 48 submissions. The submissions and answers to questions on
notice are listed at Appendix 1. On 26 November 2014 and 4 March 2015, the
committee held public hearings in Canberra and on 7 April 2015 in Sydney. A list of
witnesses is at Appendix 2.
1.5
In December 2014, an international delegation made up of members of the
committee travelled to Singapore and Canada. They took the opportunity during their
visit to discuss matters related to digital currency including approaches to its
regulation. For example, digital currency was considered during meetings with
representatives of the Bank of Canada, Finance Canada, the Canada Revenue Agency,
and the Royal Canadian Mint. In addition, on 16 December 2014, the delegation met
with the Chair, Senator the Hon Irving Gerstein, and members of the Canadian
Senate's Standing Committee on Banking Trade and Commerce which is also
conducting an inquiry into digital currency. It is worth noting that like Australia,
Canada also treats digital currencies, such as Bitcoin, as commodities, and
transactions using digital currencies as barter transactions. In this context, committee
members were able to exchange views on the regulatory risks related to digital
currencies particularly given the rapid rate of changing technology.
chapter 5looks at how digital currencies fit within the financial and
payments system regulatory frameworks; and
Acknowledgements
1.7
The committee thanks all those who assisted with the inquiry, especially those
who made written submissions.
Chapter 2
Overview and recent developments
What is digital currency?
2.1
In its 2014 report on virtual currencies, the Financial Action Task Force
(FATF), an inter-governmental body established in 1989 by a Group of Seven (G-7)
Summit in Paris, defined digital currency as:
[A] digital representation of value that can be digitally traded and functions
as (1) a medium of exchange; and/or (2) a unit of account; and/or (3) a store
of value, but does not have legal tender status (i.e., when tendered to a
creditor, is a valid and legal offer of payment) in any jurisdiction. It is not
issued nor guaranteed by any jurisdiction, and fulfils the above functions
only by agreement within the community of users of the virtual currency.
Virtual currency is distinguished from fiat currency (a.k.a. 'real currency',
'real money', or 'national currency'), which is the coin and paper money of a
country that is designated as its legal tender; circulates; and is customarily
used and accepted as a medium of exchange in the issuing country. It is
distinct from e-money, which is a digital representation of fiat currency
used to electronically transfer value denominated in fiat currency. E-money
is a digital transfer mechanism for fiat currencyi.e., it electronically
transfers value that has legal tender status. 1
2.2
The term 'digital currency' can sometimes have a broader meaning, which also
includes e-money. 2 For the purposes of this report the terms 'digital currency' and
'virtual currency' can be used interchangeably. 3
Types of digital currency
2.3
Digital currency can be divided into two basic types: convertible and
non-convertible digital currency. Convertible digital currency has an equivalent value
in real (fiat) currency and can be exchanged back-and-forth for real currency (Bitcoin
is an example of convertible currency). Non-convertible digital currency, on the other
hand, cannot be exchanged for fiat currency and is intended to be specific to a
Robleh Ali, John Barrdear, Roger Clews and James Southgate, 'The economics of digital
currencies', Quarterly Bulletin, Q3 2014, Bank of England, vol.54, no.3, p. 277.
http://www.bankofengland.co.uk/publications/Documents/quarterlybulletin/2014/qb14q302.pdf
(accessed 30 April 2015).
Robleh Ali, John Barrdear, Roger Clews and James Southgate, 'Innovations in payment
technologies and the emergence of digital currencies', Quarterly Bulletin, Q3 2014, Bank of
England, vol.54, no.3, p. 266.
http://www.bankofengland.co.uk/publications/Documents/quarterlybulletin/2014/qb14q301.pdf
(accessed 30 April 2015).
2.6
While Bitcoin is the most prominent digital currency, there are currently more
than five hundred different digital currencies, including Litecoin, Ripple, Peercoin,
Nxt, Dogecoin, Darkcoin, Namecoin, Mastercoin and BitcoinDark. 9 Most of these
alternative digital currencies were inspired by, or explicitly modelled on, Bitcoin. 10
Digital currency intermediaries
2.7
Digital currency users may use intermediaries to manage their holdings and
facilitate transactions. For Bitcoin users, there is a range of intermediaries which
provide services to users. 11
10
Robleh Ali, John Barrdear, Roger Clews and James Southgate, 'Innovations in payment
technologies and the emergence of digital currencies', Quarterly Bulletin, Q3 2014, Bank of
England, vol.54, no.3, p. 266.
http://www.bankofengland.co.uk/publications/Documents/quarterlybulletin/2014/qb14q301.pdf
(accessed 30 April 2015).
11
(GST) purposes. Bitcoin is, however, an asset for capital gains tax (CGT)
purposes. 12
2.9
2.10
A summary of the taxation implication of the ATO's rulings on digital
currencies is as follows:
Goods and Services Tax (GST)Individuals will be charged GST when they
buy digital currency, as with any other property. Businesses will charge GST
when they supply digital currency and be charged GST when they buy digital
currency.
12
13
International approaches
2.13
The ATO's ruling, that digital currency is a commodity rather than a currency,
is similar to the tax guidance provided by relevant authorities in other countries such
as Canada and Singapore. 17 Alternatively, other jurisdictions such as the United
Kingdom and most recently Spain, have released guidance advising that digital
currency is exempt from value added tax (VAT) under Article 135(1)(d) of the
European Union (EU) VAT Directive. 18 The EU is waiting on a ruling from the EU
14
15
The Hon Joe Hockey, Treasurer of the Commonwealth of Australia, 'Time to 're:think' our tax
system', media release, 30 March 2015, http://jbh.ministers.treasury.gov.au/media-release/0212015/ (accessed 30 April 2015).
16
The Australian Government the Treasury, Re:think: Tax discussion paper: Better tax system,
better Australia, March 2015, p. 9, http://bettertax.gov.au/publications/discussion-paper/
(accessed 30 April 2015).
17
18
HM Revenue and Customs, 'Policy paper: Revenue and Customs Brief 9 (2014): Bitcoin and
other cryptocurrencies', 3 March 2014, https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/revenueand-customs-brief-9-2014-bitcoin-and-other-cryptocurrencies/revenue-and-customs-brief-92014-bitcoin-and-other-cryptocurrencies#vat-treatment-of-bitcoin-and-similar-cryptocurrencies
(accessed 30 April 2015); Law and Bitcoin, 'Bitcoin is Exempt from VAT in Spain',
16 April 2015, http://lawandbitcoin.com/en/bitcoin-is-vat-exempt-in-spain/#vat and bitcoin in
europe (accessed 30 April 2015).
19
20
Australian Securities and Investments Commission, Submission 44, p. 31; Mr Michael Hardy,
Australian Taxation Office, Committee Hansard, 4 March 2015, p. 16.
21
22
Dr Anthony Richards, Reserve Bank of Australia, Committee Hansard, 7 April 2015, p. 45.
23
2.18
In summary, ASIC advised that 'if you decide to trade or use virtual
currencies you are taking on a lot of risk with no recourse if things go wrong'. 25
2.19
On 26 November 2014, the Parliamentary Joint Committee on Corporations
and Financial Services tabled a report on the oversight of ASIC. During the course of
the inquiry, ASIC informed the committee of its approach to digital currency:
Virtual currencies such as Bitcoins are a developing area globally. ASIC
monitors new developments in the marketplace and, accordingly, ASIC is
considering whether and how the legislation it administers, such as the
Corporations Act, applies to virtual currencies.
ASIC's view is that Bitcoins themselves (and other virtual currencies) are
not financial products and are not regulated under the legislation we
administer. Unlike Australian dollars or other traditional currencies,
Bitcoins are not issued by a central bank and do not give the Bitcoin holder
any right to make payments in this form.
ASIC is consulting with other Australian regulators that are also giving
consideration to the regulation of virtual currencies. This includes both
financial regulators and law enforcement agencies that are examining the
24
Australian Securities and Investments Commission, 'Virtual currencies: Bitcoin and other
virtual currencies', last updated 26 August 2014,
https://www.moneysmart.gov.au/investing/investment-warnings/virtual-currencies
(accessed 30 April 2015).
25
Australian Securities and Investments Commission, 'Virtual currencies: Bitcoin and other
virtual currencies', last updated 26 August 2014,
https://www.moneysmart.gov.au/investing/investment-warnings/virtual-currencies
(accessed 30 April 2015).
10
2.20
The Parliamentary Joint Committee on Corporations and Financial Services
noted that it will continue to monitor the development of digital currencies. 27
2.21
While ASIC does not consider digital currencies to be currency or money for
the purposes of the Corporations Act or the ASIC Act, the general consumer
protection provisions of the Competition and Consumer Act 2010 apply to digital
currencies, rather than the equivalent provisions in the ASIC Act. The Competition
and Consumer Act 2010 is administered by the Australian Competition and Consumer
Commission (ACCC). The ACCC's SCAMwatch and consumer information
webpages do not include any specific warnings about digital currencies. 28
Financial System Inquiry
2.22
On 20 December 2013, the Hon Joe Hockey MP, Treasurer, announced the
final terms of reference for the government's Financial System Inquiry (FSI) and the
appointment of four members of the inquiry panel to be chaired by
Mr David Murray AO. The purpose of the FSI was to examine how Australia's
financial system could be 'positioned to best meet Australia's evolving needs and
support Australia's economic growth'. 29 On 7 December 2014, the final report of the
FSI was released and the Treasury is currently conducting a consultation process on
the FSI recommendations. 30
2.23
The FSI report noted that national currencies are currently the only
instruments widely used to fulfil the economic functions of moneythat is, as a store
of value, a medium of exchange and a unit of account. The FSI found that:
Digital currencies are not currently widely used as a unit of account in
Australia and as such may not be regarded as 'money'. However, their use in
payment systems could expand in the future. It will be important that
payments system regulation is able to accommodate them, as well as other
potential payment instruments that are not yet conceived. Current
26
27
28
29
The Hon Joe Hockey, Treasurer of the Commonwealth of Australia, 'Financial System Inquiry',
media release, 20 December 2013. http://jbh.ministers.treasury.gov.au/media-release/037-2013/
(accessed 30 April 2015).
30
11
International approaches
2.24
In August 2014, the UK government announced it was considering regulation
of digital currencies. In November 2014, it published a call for information and the
outcome of this consultation process was released in March 2015. In relation to
consumer protection the UK government announced its intention to work with the
digital currency industry and the British Standards Institution to develop voluntary
standards for consumer protection. In its view, this approach would address potential
risks to consumers without imposing a disproportionate regulatory burden on the
digital currency industry. 32
2.25
The Canadian Senate's Standing Committee on Banking Trade and Commerce
conducted an inquiry into digital currency and tabled its report on 19 June 2015. It
investigated how digital currency should be treated, including whether it should be
regulated. It recommended that the Canadian government should exercise a regulatory
'light touch' in order to create an environment that fosters innovation and minimises
the risks of stifling new technologies. 33
2.26
Both the Singapore and Canadian governments have published advice for
consumers, similar to ASIC's MoneySmart webpage, warning consumers of the risks
associated with digital currency. 34
Law enforcement
2.27
Digital currencies, such as Bitcoin, are not currently covered under section 5
of the Anti-Money Laundering and Counter-Terrorism Financing Act 2006
(AML/CTF Act). The Act, however, recognises e-currency, which is defined as
follows:
e-currency means an internet-based, electronic means of exchange that is:
31
The Australian Government the Treasury, Financial System Inquiry: Final report,
November 2014, p. 166.
32
HM Treasury, Digital currencies: response to the call for information, March 2015, p. 19,
https://www.gov.uk/government/uploads/system/uploads/attachment_data/file/414040/digital_c
urrencies_response_to_call_for_information_final_changes.pdf (accessed 30 April 2015).
33
Canadian Standing Senate Committee on Banking Trade and Commerce, Digital Currency:
You Can't Flip this Coin!, June 2015, p. 13.
http://www.parl.gc.ca/Content/SEN/Committee/412/banc/rep/rep12jun15-e.pdf (accessed
23 June 2015).
34
12
(a)
e-currency;
(ii)
e-money;
precious metal; or
(ii)
bullion; or
2.28
The AML/CTF Act currently only covers a very small proportion of the
digital currencies. It does not cover digital currencies, such as Bitcoin, that are not
backed by precious metal or bullion. While subsection 5(b)(iii) enables the regulation
of digital currencies backed either directly or indirectly by 'a thing of a kind
prescribed by the AML/CTF Rules', no such rules have been issued to date. 35
2.29
Australia's current AML/CTF regime allows for limited regulatory oversight
of convertible digital currencies. Because digital currencies such as Bitcoin are not yet
widely used and accepted, they are yet to form a 'closed loop' economy, and whenever
they are exchanged for fiat currencies, or vice versa ('on ramps' and 'off ramps'), the
transactions will generally intersect with banking or remittance services which are
regulated under the AML/CTF regime. 36 For example, Australian Transaction Reports
and Analysis Centre (AUSTRAC), Australia's AML/CTF regulator, is able to monitor
and track reportable transactions such as:
35
36
37
Australian Transaction Reports and Analysis Centre, AUSTRAC typologies and case studies
report 2014, 2014, p. 13.
13
38
Attorney-General's Department, 'Statutory Review of the Anti-Money Laundering and CounterTerrorism Financing Act 2006',
http://www.ag.gov.au/consultations/pages/StatReviewAntiMoneyLaunderingCounterTerrorism
FinActCth2006.aspx (accessed 30 April 2015).
39
40
41
HM Treasury, Digital currencies: response to the call for information, March 2015, p. 19,
https://www.gov.uk/government/uploads/system/uploads/attachment_data/file/414040/digital_c
urrencies_response_to_call_for_information_final_changes.pdf (accessed 30 April 2015).
42
Financial Transactions and Reports Analysis Centre of Canada, 'FINTRAC Advisory regarding
Money Services Businesses dealing in virtual currency', 30 July 2014, http://www.fintraccanafe.gc.ca/new-neuf/avs/2014-07-30-eng.asp (accessed 15 May 2015).
14
2.34
In its report on digital currency, the Canadian Senate's Standing Committee
on Banking Trade and Commerce recommended that the Canadian government should
require digital currency exchanges, excluding businesses that solely provide wallet
services, to meet the same requirements as money service businesses under Canada's
AML/CTF laws. The report recommended that digital currency exchanges should be
defined as 'any business that allows customers to convert state-issued currency to
digital currency and digital currencies to state-issued currency or other digital
currencies'. 43
2.35
On 13 March 2014, the Money Authority of Singapore (MAS) announced that
it would regulate digital currency intermediaries that buy, sell or facilitate the
exchange of digital currencies for fiat currencies under its AML/CTF regime. 44
Financial Action Task Force
2.36
The Financial Action Task Force (FATF) is an independent intergovernmental
body that develops and promotes policies to protect the global financial system against
money laundering and terrorism financing. FATF released a report on digital
currencies in June 2014, establishing a common definitional vocabulary and
suggesting a conceptual framework for understanding and addressing the AML/CTF
risks associated with digital currencies. 45
2.37
On 1 July 2014, Mr Roger Wilkins AO, former Secretary of the Attorney
General's Department, assumed the Presidency of the FATF. Mr Wilkins has indicated
that during his term he intends to examine the money laundering and terrorism
financing risks associated with digital currencies and, consider whether further policy
measures are necessary. 46
Conclusion
2.38
Countries are considering the regulatory challenges presented by the
emergence of new forms of digital currencies. Australia is no exception and in the
following chapters the committee will explore some of these challenges and how best
to address them.
43
Canadian Standing Senate Committee on Banking Trade and Commerce, Digital Currency:
You Can't Flip this Coin!, June 2015, p. 13.
http://www.parl.gc.ca/Content/SEN/Committee/412/banc/rep/rep12jun15-e.pdf (accessed
23 June 2015).
44
45
46
Chapter 3
Opportunities and risks
3.1
Advances in technology have produced rapid changes in the way Australians
are managing their money. While the advent of digital currency has opened up a range
of opportunities, it also presents risks. The Australian Payments Clearing Association
(APCA), the self-regulatory body set up by the payments industry to improve the
safety, reliability, equity, convenience and efficiency of the Australian payments
system, recognised both the possible benefits and drawbacks of emerging digital
currencies, observing:
New technologies, particularly network and cloud-based technologies such
as the block chain, offer the potential for valuable innovation and
competition. However payments system regulation must balance competing
policy objectives. It must maintain a balance between stability, efficiency
and competition-driven innovation while ensuring confidence and
integrity. 1
3.2
In this chapter, the committee explores the potential opportunities and risks of
digital currency.
3.4
The European Banking Authority similarly referred to the lower transaction
costs and the faster speeds associated with virtual currencies. It noted:
The European Securities and Markets Authority, Call for evidence, Investment using virtual
currency or distributed ledger technology, 22 April 2015, paragraphs 34 and 35,
http://www.esma.europa.eu/system/files/2015532_call_for_evidence_on_virtual_currency_investment.pdf (accessed 29 May 2015).
16
3.5
3.6
The European Banking Authority lists a number of other advantages attached
to virtual currencies including:
3.7
While digital currencies offer numerous advantages, their benefits are not as
significant in the Australian context. APCA noted that, unlike some other countries,
currently Australia 'enjoys a sophisticated, ubiquitousglobally competitive payment
17
system with generally high quality regulatory structures and settings'. 6 Australia's
payment system is already overwhelmingly digital in nature, with only about
18 per cent of Australian currency existing in physical form. 7
3.8
For example, EFTPOS transactions in Australia cost 16 cents on average, so
there is little room for digital currencies to improve on domestic point-of-sale
purchases, which account for around 40 percent of all transactions by value. 8
Australians already have many different payment systems including EFTPOS,
interbank transfers, PayPal and international transfer via SWIFT. In this context,
digital currencies, such as Bitcoin, do not offer much more additional capability. But
in developing countries, digital currencies may provide secure international facilities
for the transfer of funds at a much lower transaction cost than available from
institutional banking. 9
Distributed ledger technology
3.9
A distributed public ledger is a major innovation and integral to the appeal
Bitcoin. The Chamber of Digital Commerce, a US not-for-profit trade association,
explained that the underlying source code or algorithm of the Bitcoin protocol, often
referred to as the blockchain, is built for the transfer of information. While the
distributed ledger currently stores, transfers and accounts for financial assets, there is
potential for the distributed ledger technology to be used to store and transfer other
types of digital assets. 10
3.10
In APCA's view, the use of distributed ledger technology in digital currencies
is unique and genuinely new, providing the opportunity to conduct both storage and
transmission of value without the traditional financial intermediaries. APCA
supported the potential for competition and innovation which could help improve
Australia's payment system in the future, noting the potential for the distributed ledger
technology to be used in the broader spherebeyond payments and currencies. 11
Mr Christopher Hamilton, of the APCA, noted:
As a concept, as a way of recording ownership of assetsit can in principle
be any asset including existing currencyit [distributed ledger technology]
Mr Mark Pesce, 'Where the bank keeps your money safe', The Drum (Australian Broadcasting
Corporation), 15 July 2014, http://www.abc.net.au/news/2014-07-15/pesce-where-the-bankkeeps-your-money/5595664 (accessed 29 May 2015).
10
11
18
is genuinely a new way of doing it. For that reason, it is worth exploring
and understanding the implications of it. 12
International remittance
3.12
Mr Jonathon Miller, co-founder of Bit Trade Australia, advised the committee
that he considered the overseas remittance market would be a growth area in Australia
for digital currency such as Bitcoin. 14 He also noted benefits for Australians using
digital currency to purchase goods and services from overseas, as these types of
transactions currently included a currency conversion fee. 15
3.13
For example, the transaction fees for transferring money from Australia to
Samoa are around 12 per cent of the transaction value. 16
3.14
APCA agreed that there was potential for digital currencies to assist with
offshore transmission of money. 17 mHITs Limited, an Australian-based mobile money
service company, did not believe that it was likely that digital currencies alone would
be used directly for cross-border remittances in the short term. While end-to-end
digital currency remittances were unlikely, businesses such as BitPesa have used
digital currencies to facilitate remittance services between Kenya and the UK. 18
3.15
The RBA formed the view that international remittance may be an area where
digital currencies might gain traction, noting currently they can be expensive and
subject to delays in the receipt of funds. 19 Even so, the RBA considered that the
12
13
14
Mr Jonathon Miller, Bit Trade Australia, Committee Hansard, 7 April 2015, p. 18.
15
Mr Jonathon Miller, Bit Trade Australia, Committee Hansard, 7 April 2015, p. 18.
16
17
18
19
19
potential offered by digital currency was not significant and referred to the work being
done through the New Payments Platform, a major industry initiative intended to
establish 'new payments infrastructure that will spur innovation in the Australian
payments industry'. 20 The RBA explained:
More broadly, however, many payment attributes of digital currencies are
already available in the traditional payments system or will be available, in
the case of the new services that may be facilitated by the New Payments
Platform project. Accordingly, it remains to be seen what would drive their
widespread use domestically, particularly in light of the price volatility of
digital currencies observed to date. 21
Financial inclusion
3.16
Ms Rebecca Bryant, Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade (DFAT), noted
that while DFAT has not provided any funding to date for any initiatives involving
digital currencies, some of its partners have. Ms Bryant noted that:
the Consultative Group for Assisting the Poor [CGAP], and the World
Bankare actively considering the applicability of digital currencies to
financial-inclusion initiatives. CGAP has looked closely at the BitPesa
start-up, which, in 2014, launched a service using bitcoin to provide cheap
and fast remittance services. BitPesa is focused on providing remittance
services for the UK-to-Kenya corridor. The UK senders buy bitcoin. These
are transferred to Kenya and immediately transferred into Kenyan shillings,
which are then deposited into mobile wallets or bank accounts. BitPesa
charges a variable rate of three per cent on the transfer. This compares to an
average cost of a remittance from the UK to Kenya of nine per cent. 22
3.17
Ms Bryant advised the committee that DFAT was 'watching closely to see
whether new business models, such as BitPesa, could have a wider application,
thereby reducing the cost of simple transactions and increasing financial inclusion
more broadly'. 23
Transparency
3.18
Ripple Labs, the San Francisco based developer of the Ripple protocol, an
open-source distributed protocol that facilitates payments and funds transfers,
suggested that the distributed ledger technology could substantially improve
transparency in cross-border funds transfers. It suggested that this is 'particularly true
of the Ripple distributed ledger system, which permits visibility of all transactions
20
Tony Richards, Head of Payments Policy Department, 'The Way We Pay: Now and in the
Future', Speech to the Australian Savings & Deposits Conference 2014, Sydney, 4 June 2014,
http://www.rba.gov.au/speeches/2014/sp-so-040614.html (accessed 29 May 2015).
21
Dr Anthony Richards, Reserve Bank of Australia, Committee Hansard, 7 April 2015, p. 45.
22
23
20
taking place through the protocol, and in which transaction histories of all accounts
are available'. 24
3.19
The Australia Federal Police (AFP) noted that while distributed ledger or
blockchain technology records all Bitcoin transactions, the identity of the persons
involved in the transactions may not be easily traceable. 25 The identity of the
individuals involved in transactions is discussed later in this chapter.
Risks
Taxation non-compliance risk
3.20
The ATO noted that digital currencies had similar compliance risks as those
associated with the cash economy. In particular, the capacity for transactions to go
unreported and be handled pseudo-anonymously. There was also the potential for
digital currency to facilitate international profit shifting or to help hide transactions, as
the nature of digital currencies means transactions can be highly mobile
internationally.
3.21
Mr Michael Hardy, ATO, advised the committee that the ATO does 'not have
a sense of an enhanced non-compliance risk with Bitcoin transactions.' He stated:
Of course, people do not put on their tax returns, 'This was my money from
bitcoin.' It is just part of their assessable income. But our own monitoring
has not indicated that there is a particularly high non-compliance risk from
bitcoin transactions. 26
3.22
In addition to its assessment that the fiscal risk associated with Bitcoin was
low, the ATO's submission noted that the total worldwide value of Bitcoin was
relatively small at approximately AU $5.96 billion when compared to Australia's GDP
in 201213 which was $1.5 trillion. 27
Financial stability
3.23
Researchers from the Finance Discipline Group, University of Technology,
Sydney, analysed the Bitcoin public ledger and found that Bitcoin is currently held
primarily for investment, rather than used as a medium of exchange. The researchers
noted that the size of Bitcoin investments and transactions was relatively small
compared to other assets. As such, they did not consider that Bitcoin is an immediate
risk to financial stability or the Australian economy as a whole. However, they
emphasised the level of risk was based on size, and may be affected by a significant
increase in the acceptance of Bitcoin or similar digital currencies in the future. 28
24
25
26
Mr Michael Hardy, Australian Taxation Office, Committee Hansard, 4 March 2015, p. 15.
27
28
21
3.24
Ripple Labs did not consider digital currencies to be a threat to financial
stability and encouraged the committee to look at digital currencies as 'complementary
currencies' rather than currencies that compete with government-issued currencies,
stating:
While we believe that utilizing digital currencies could be particularly
attractive for facilitating cross-border payments, Ripple Labs does not share
the view that digital currencies should replace fiat currencies. For many
reasons, including geo-political considerations, it is highly unlikely that any
digital currency could pose a meaningful threat to monetary or fiscal
stability for the foreseeable future. 29
3.25
Mr Shapiro from Promontory Financial Group LLC, a regulatory risk
management and compliance consultancy, told the committee he did not believe
digital currencies would replace national currencies:
It is simple. People understand their Australian dollars, their US dollars and
their British pound, and I think a lot of the future of this is actually going to
be allowing consumers to hold balances in the currencies they understand
and use the back end of this for payments just as merchants today can use
services. 30
3.26
APCA maintained that private currencies were not a new phenomenon and
unlikely to affect the payment system adversely, so long as the bulk of activity
continued to occur in fiat currencies. 31 It also noted that while the distributed ledger
technology has a lot of interesting potential, it did not necessarily follow that digital
currencies would have a massive role in the Australian economy. 32
Price volatility
3.27
A number of submitters referred to the price instability of Bitcoin. Ripple
Labs noted that as digital currencies involve volatile assets with inherent price
volatility and risks, they may not be suited for direct consumer interaction. 33
3.28
Mr Christopher Guzowski, ABA Technology, observed, however, that there
had been a downward trend in volatility of Bitcoin noting, the main reason for this
development was that 'more exchanges are opening up around the world, there are
more traders, there are more market makers, there is more market depth, more
liquidity and therefore the spreads are being lowered and the volatility is reducing'. 34
29
30
31
32
33
34
22
Pseudo-anonymity
3.29
Digital currencies such as Bitcoin do not provide complete anonymity for
users. This type of digital currency is better described as offering pseudo-anonymity.
The Attorney-General's Department explained:
To use Bitcoin as an example, every Bitcoin transaction is linked to a
corresponding public key, which is then stored and made publicly available
to view in the block chain. If a person's identity were linked to a public key,
then it would be possible to look through the recorded transactions in the
block chain and easily see all transactions associated with that key. In other
words, Bitcoin offers users the ability to transact under the concealed
identity of their Bitcoin address/public key, but all of their transactions are
available for full public viewing and therefore for law enforcement scrutiny.
When these transactions were examined and used to construct a pattern of
behaviour, analysts in a simulated experiment were able to reveal the
identities of approximately forty percent of Bitcoin users. 35
3.30
The AFP also noted that although the distributed ledger is public, the identity
of persons involved in the transactions may not be readily traceable. The AFP was
concerned that pseudo-anonymity and the ability to conduct digital currency
transactions outside the regulated financial framework would make it difficult to
determine the true owners of digital currencies. 36
Criminal activities
3.31
The nature of digital currencies, which can be traded online without face-toface customer relationships, provides a greater degree of anonymity compared to
traditional non-cash payments methods. The Attorney-General's Department observed
that digital currencies provide 'a powerful new tool for criminals, terrorist financiers
and sanctions evaders to both move and store illicit funds out of the reach of law
enforcement and other authorities and purchase illicit goods and services'. 37
3.32
The Attorney-General's Department also noted that the risks associated with
digital currencies were not hypothetical. In May 2013 the US Treasury and the
Department of Justice undertook a coordinated enforcement action against Liberty
Reserve, a centralised convertible digital currency system being used to facilitate US
$6 billion worth of illicit online activity, including identity fraud, credit card fraud,
computer hacking and online scams. Liberty Reserve was designed to avoid regulatory
and law enforcement scrutiny to assist criminals to distribute, store and launder the
proceeds of illegal activities by enabling anonymous, untraceable financial
transactions. 38
35
36
37
38
Attorney-General's Department, Submission 42, pp. 67; see also FATF, Virtual Currencies
Key Definitions and Potential AML/CTF Risks, June 2014, pp. 10.
23
3.33
Further, decentralised digital currencies such as Bitcoin, which do not have a
central server or service provider, are of greater concern for law enforcement
authorities and regulators than centralised convertible currencies such as Liberty
Reserve. The Attorney General's Department explained that the now-defunct Silk
Road website demonstrated features that make decentralised digital currencies
attractive to criminals seeking to launder money and either purchase or accept
payment for illicit goods and services. The Silk Road website was a black market site
on the Dark Net, the portion of internet content that is not indexed by standard search
engines. Silk Road took advantage of the pseudo-anonymous nature of Bitcoin and
anonymising 'Tor' software to create a marketplace where mail-order drugs and other
licit and illicit goods and services could be traded. The FBI shut down the Silk Road
website in October 2013 following a two-year investigation. 39
3.34
The Attorney-General's Department advised that there appeared to be little
evidence to date indicating the use of digital currencies as a means of financing
terrorism. It noted that AUSTRAC concluded in its 2012 typologies and case studies
report that while the 'anonymous nature of digital currencies may appeal to criminal
groups and individuals, their overall utility for criminals at this point may currently be
limited to niche crimes in the cyber environment and individual or smaller-scale illicit
activity'. 40
3.35
The AFP noted in its submission that its main experience with digital
currencies to date had been with Bitcoin. It identified four main areas of crime
involving digital currency that had been investigated:
money laundering and dealing with the proceeds of crime via Bitcoin. 41
Hacking
3.36
A number of submitters noted that custodial accounts pose a significant risk to
consumers and should be the focus of regulation. 42 Mr Antonopoulos stated:
In fact, any accounts that take control of Bitcoin keys, and therefore remove
them from the protection and security of the Bitcoin network, create areas
of centralisation. And we have seen before, many times, that such
environments are prone to hacking, theft and, in many cases, what we
suspect to be embezzlement and insider action. Those types of
39
40
41
42
Mr Andreas Antonopoulos, Committee Hansard, 4 March 2015, pp. 23; Mr Chris Mountford,
Submission 40, p. 4; Coinbase, Submission 41, p. 6.
24
43
44
45
Dr John Moss, Australian Crime Commission, Committee Hansard, 4 March 2015, p. 13.
46
Dr John Moss, Australian Crime Commission, Committee Hansard, 4 March 2015, p. 13.
47
Dr John Moss, Australian Crime Commission, Committee Hansard, 4 March 2015, p. 13.
48
Justice and International Mission Unit, Synod of Victoria and Tasmania, Uniting Church of
Australia, Submission 30, pp. 912.
25
3.42
With regard to another aspect of potential criminal activity, the AFP noted
that the nature of digital currencies created challenges for the ability of law
enforcement agencies to recover proceeds of crime. 50 The Centre for Internet Safety
recommended that law enforcement should be resourced so they are able to 'innovate
their investigative tools and techniques alongside this new technology in order to
ensure investigations are not impeded by any improvement in criminals' ability to
move funds anonymously'. 51
Current level of risk
3.43
Despite the potential for digital currencies to be used for criminal activity,
Mr Jared Taggart, AFP, noted that digital currencies were not currently a significant
operational issue. He warned, however, that if the predictions were correct and digital
currencies become more widely used, it could become an issue in the future. 52
3.44
Mr Antonopoulos argued that Bitcoin was a rather benign form of digital
currency, noting:
There are other [digital currencies] that are much stealthier, much more
anonymous, and may be encouraged to grow if onerous legislation is
passed. Now, certainly bitcoin has been used for criminal purposes. That is
a fact. To use a slightly humorous analogy, it has come to my attention that
the vast majority of criminals also use shoes. That does not mean that shoes
are the problem. 53
3.45
Mr Hamish Hansford, ACC, explained that from a law enforcement
perspective, digital currency was just another type of encryption:
Encryption is used in a whole range of different areas, from
communications, where we are seeing encrypted communicationsright
through to the use of darknets, or hidden parts of the internet, and payment
through virtual currencies. 54
Conclusion
3.46
The committee acknowledges that digital currency presents opportunities,
including the broader application of the distributed ledger technology, increased
competition in the payments system, and especially in transactions involving
international remittances and providing services in developing countries. There are,
49
50
51
52
53
54
26
however, risks associated with the use of this new technology requiring careful and
constant monitoring.
Chapter 4
Tax treatment of digital currencies
4.1
On 20 August 2014, the ATO published a suite of draft public rulings
expressing its preliminary view of the tax treatment of digital currency, specifically
Bitcoin. The ATO's rulings were drafted after representatives of the digital currency
industry asked the ATO to publish its position on the tax treatment of Bitcoin. The
ATO called for public comment on the draft rulings, which closed on
3 October 2014. 1
4.2
In this chapter, the committee considers the tax arrangements for digital
currencies and whether there is a need to make changes. The digital currency
industry's primary concern regarding the ATO's rulings related to the GST treatment
of digital currencies.
Mr Michael Hardy, Australian Taxation Office, Committee Hansard, 4 March 2015, p. 15.
Mr Michael Hardy, Australian Taxation Office, Committee Hansard, 4 March 2015, p. 15.
28
4.5
Mr Hardy noted that the feedback the ATO had received from the business
community was not necessarily in full agreement with the ATO's advice on the
operation of the existing law, however, there was an appreciation for the degree of
certainty the ATO had provided. 6 Bitcoin Group, an Australian based Bitcoin
company, for example, advised the committee that while it did not agree with the
ATO's ruling on GST, its 'ambitions would have been more difficult to realise without
the regulatory clarity provided through the ATO's digital currency tax guidances'. 7
4.6
One submitter noted that while the tax treatment for digital currency had been
unclear prior to the ATO rulings, 'it was nonetheless obvious to most participants that
normal taxation rules applied. That is, tax must be paid on any profits made, either
through general income tax arrangements or as capital-gains tax on Bitcoin
investments'. 8
4.9
Mr Andrew Sommer, Clayton Utz, noted that the domestic tax treatment was
the critical issue for digital currency businesses, stating:
Where GST or VAT is imposed on the acquisition of bitcoins as part of a
trading transaction, it makes it much more difficult and much less
economically viable for me to take my Australian dollars and convert them
into bitcoin if one-eleventh of that transaction is going to be lost in GST at
the point that I do that. For everyday consumers, that one-eleventh cost is a
real cost. That is a consequence of treating bitcoin like a commodity rather
than a currency. 11
Mr Michael Hardy, Australian Taxation Office, Committee Hansard, 4 March 2015, p. 15.
10
Mr Michael Hardy, Australian Taxation Office, Committee Hansard, 4 March 2015, p. 16.
11
29
4.10
BitAwareAustralia, a non-profit organisation that promotes the practical
advantages of digital currency, emphasised that the Bitcoin community was not
looking for a 'free ride', or to use the currencies as a tax haven. It noted that for the
most part, the Bitcoin community accepted their obligation to pay capital gains tax on
any investment profits, and it was happy to pay GST on goods or services purchased
using Bitcoin. However, the community's 'only point of contention to the ATO's ruling
is to our industry being rendered uncompetitive because of additional GST levied over
and above our fiat-based competitors and international Bitcoin-based competitors'. 12
4.11
The Melbourne Bitcoin Technology Center argued that 'removing the double
taxation of Bitcoin is required to support start-ups develop and capture a share of the
emerging economic advantage of digital currency in this country'. 13
4.12
The committee heard of the negative effect the GST ruling had already had on
some businesses. One submitter observed that:
Australian technology firms have or are planning to shift overseas.
Operations, such as my own, have either shut down or significantly
curtailed their activities. This is a very disappointing personal outcome for
all the Australians involved, to see their efforts invalidated through no
shortcoming of their own. 14
4.13
CoinJar, an Australian digital finance start-up, noted that the ATO's GST
ruling had rendered it 'uncompetitive against non-Australian rivals'. 15 Mr Guzowski,
ABA Technology, observed that applying GST to digital currency 'puts additional
friction on transactions and it completely sets it apart from other types of currency and
does not make it practical to purchase locally. Soit has sent a lot of businesses
offshore. It is putting a brake on the industry, for sure'. 16
4.14
Mr Antonopoulos argued that the decision to apply GST to digital currency
'fundamentally misunderstands the nature of the system, ascribing it the properties of a
commodity, which it is not, and as a result having significant friction. That may be a
major disadvantage for Australian Bitcoin companies'. 17
4.15
Professor Miranda Stewart and Mr Joel Emery from the Tax and Transfer
Policy Institute, Australian National University considered that the current GST
treatment 'poorly reflects digital currencies' practical purpose'. 18 Professor Stewart and
12
BitAwareAustralia, Submission 17, p. 15; Bitcoin Group Limited was concerned that capital
gains tax treatment, as well as the GST treatment of digital currency, had slowed domestic
adoption of the technology, Submission 38, p. [3].
13
14
15
16
17
18
Professor Miranda Stewart and Mr Joel Emery, The Tax and Transfer Policy Institute,
Australian National University, Submission 23, p. 12.
30
Mr Emery noted that the UK's VAT ruling had created a 'jurisdiction with a relatively
favourable tax regime to which intermediaries may relocate if the Australian
regulatory framework is considered unfavourable'. 19 In the UK, digital currencies are
exempt from VAT. They suggested that a similar exemption to the application of the
GST in Australia 'would promote simplicity and neutrality, as it treats sales using
digital currency as payment largely the same as sales using traditional cash'. 20
4.16
The Institute of Public Affairs shared the views expressed by Bitcoin
businesses that imposing a GST on Bitcoin and other digital currencies could stifle the
development of this technology. It argued that treating digital currencies in the same
way as fiat currencies would 'enable the continuing development of non-state forms of
currency'. 21
GST and different currency exchange services
4.17
There has also been some uncertainty surrounding the way GST is applied to
different types of digital currency exchange services within Australia.
4.18
The ATO explained the way in which different business models for
exchanging digital currency such as Bitcoin may attract different tax outcomes. For
example:
A principal or direct sales model of exchange: where Bitcoin is held in its own
right, the business would need to charge GST on the supply of Bitcoin, as it is
being bought or sold directly by the exchange.
4.19
Mr Guzowski, ABA Technology, explained that his company's business
model means they do not sell Bitcoin, but facilitate the purchase of Bitcoin from
overseas vendors. He charges GST on the fee for providing the service, but not on the
Bitcoin itself. 23
4.20
BitAwareAustralia noted that the principal or direct sales type model proved
the 'most trouble-free way to trade bitcoins'. However, the added expense of GST
being charged on the total purchase had turned a lot of users away from these sites.
19
Professor Miranda Stewart and Mr Joel Emery, The Tax and Transfer Policy Institute,
Australian National University, Submission 23, p. 13.
20
Professor Miranda Stewart and Mr Joel Emery, The Tax and Transfer Policy Institute,
Australian National University, Submission 23, p. 13.
21
22
Mr Michael Hardy, Australian Taxation Office, Committee Hansard, 4 March 2015, p. 16.
23
31
BitAwareAustralia noted that some direct Bitcoin sales sites have closed down in the
wake of the ATO's ruling on Bitcoin. 24
4.21
Bit Trade Australia is an exchange which holds Bitcoin and buys and sells
directly to its customers. According to Bit Trade Australia the GST ruling has:
increased the cost of the service we are providing to customers because
they not only have to pay for our service provision, which is the supply of a
spot contract, but we also have to levy GST on the good itself. So compared
to, say for example, purchasing bitcoin from another provider based in
another jurisdiction, the cost of our service provision to the customer is
10 per cent more. A lot of Australian businesses have left the jurisdiction to
set up in other markets because they found it impossible to survive with the
costs levied. The net effect has been the shutdown of some businesses and
reduction in volume and trade in this jurisdiction, and we have experienced
drops in trade and volume. 25
Committee view
4.22
The committee considers that the most immediate concern for Australian
digital currency businesses is the current GST treatment of digital currencies.
Proposed legislative changes to address these concerns are discussed later in this
chapter.
(b)
(c)
(d)
(e)
24
25
Mr Jonathon Miller, Bit Trade Australia, Committee Hansard, 7 April 2015, p. 12.
32
(f)
a collector's piece; or
(g)
an investment article; or
(h)
(i)
currency the market value of which exceeds its stated value as legal
tender in the country of issue. 26
4.25
Mr Sommer, Clayton Utz, noted that he and others had made submissions to
the ATO's consultation process to advise that an argument could be made that the
definition of money, as it currently exists in the GST Act, could be extended to
include digital currency. He stated:
One of the great things about tax law is that you can always argue both
sides. In relation to this particular issue, there are two or three key
definitions: there is money, currency and foreign currency. In relation to the
GST law, the key definition for most of this will be the definition of money.
That definition is an 'includes' definition. There is an argument to be made
that the definition of money as it sits in section 1951 of the GST Act is
capable, on its current terms, of extending to bitcoin. 27
4.26
The ATO confirmed that it had considered these arguments when making its
determination. 28 Ms Preston noted that it was the ATO's role to interpret the law and
that Treasury was satisfied with the way the ATO had dealt with digital currency. 29 As
noted earlier, the ATO has stated that the question of whether digital currencies should
be treated as 'money' or 'currency' was a matter for government. 30
Proposed changes to the definitions of 'money' and 'financial supplies'
4.27
The ATO advised the committee that in order to treat digital currencies as
money for the purposes of GST would require changes to the definitions of 'money'
and the 'financial supplies'. It advised that changing the definition of 'money' to
include digital currencies would require a legislative change to the GST Act. 31
4.28
The ATO noted the definition of 'financial supplies' is set out at regulation
40-5.09 of the A New Tax System (Goods and Services Tax) Regulations 1999 (GST
Regulations). Any change to this definition could be achieved by amendment to the
GST Regulations, and would not require legislative change. 32
26
A New Tax System (Goods and Services Tax) Act 1999 - Sect 195.1.
27
Mr Andrew Sommer, Clayton Utz, Committee Hansard, 26 November 2014, p. 11. See also
Adroit Lawyers, Submission 39, p. 5.
28
29
30
31
Answers to questions on notice from a public hearing held in Canberra on 4 March 2015,
received from the Australian Taxation Office on 19 March 2015, p. [3].
32
Answers to questions on notice from a public hearing held in Canberra on 4 March 2015,
received from the Australian Taxation Office on 19 March 2015, p. [3].
33
4.29
However, if the definition of 'financial supplies' were changed in the GST
Regulations without also changing the definition of 'money' in the GST Act, there may
be additional complexity and compliance costs for some businesses. The ATO
explained:
This would make the supply of cryptocurrency input taxed. To the extent a
business made acquisitions relating to the supply of Bitcoin (e.g. payments
to a relevant point of sale provider) it would be blocked from claiming
related input tax credits. This would not apply to businesses that are below
the 'financial acquisitions threshold': see Division 189 of the Act. 33
4.30
An alternative approach would be to create specific exemptions or special
rules, rather the definitions of 'money' and 'financial supplies'. However, the ATO's
preliminary view is that such alternative approaches would require a change to the
GST Act. 34
4.31
The ATO concluded that if the intention were to treat digital currency like
money for GST purposes, the most straight forward approach would be to amend the
definition of 'money' in the GST Act to this effect, in addition to defining digital
currency as a financial supply in the GST Regulations to cater for exchange
transactions. 35
4.32
Both the Treasury and the ATO noted that any change to the GST Act would
require agreement by the states and territories. 36 The ATO stated:
The GST is levied by the Commonwealth, but the revenue from the GST is
distributed to the states and territories. This arrangement is set out in the
Intergovernmental Agreement on Federal Financial RelationsClause A14
provides that any proposal to vary the GST base will require the unanimous
support of the States and Territory Governments, the endorsement by the
Commonwealth Government and the passage [of] relevant legislation by
both Houses of the Commonwealth Parliament. The requirement for
unanimous agreement by the states and territories is legislated in Section 11
of the A New Tax System (Managing the GST Rate and Base) Act 1999. The
'base' of the GST refers to the range of goods and services to which the
GST applies. 37
33
Answers to questions on notice from a public hearing held in Canberra on 4 March 2015,
received from the Australian Taxation Office on 19 March 2015, p. [3].
34
Answers to questions on notice from a public hearing held in Canberra on 4 March 2015,
received from the Australian Taxation Office on 19 March 2015, p. [3].
35
Answers to questions on notice from a public hearing held in Canberra on 4 March 2015,
received from the Australian Taxation Office on 19 March 2015, p. [3].
36
Ms Kate Preston, Treasury, Committee Hansard, 4 March 2015, pp. 1718; Answers to
questions on notice from a public hearing held in Canberra on 4 March 2015, received from the
Australian Taxation Office on 19 March 2015, p. [3].
37
Answers to questions on notice from a public hearing held in Canberra on 4 March 2015,
received from the Australian Taxation Office on 19 March 2015, pp. [34].
34
4.33
Ms Preston, Treasury, noted that while it was unlikely that the states and
territories would treat this as an issue of major concern, they would need to be
consulted on any proposed changes to the GST Act. 38
Committee view
4.34
The committee considers that digital currency transactions should be treated
in the same manner as national or foreign currency for the purposes of the GST. The
current treatment of digital currency transactions as barter transactions, creates a
double taxation effect that has placed an additional burden on Australian digital
currency businesses. The committee received evidence from the ATO advising that
amendments to both the legislation and regulations would be necessary in order to
change the current GST treatment of digital currencies.
Recommendation 1
4.35
The committee is of the view that digital currency should be treated as
money for the purposes of the goods and services tax. As such, the committee
recommends that the government consults with the states and territories to
consider amending the definition of money in the A New Tax System (Goods and
Services Tax) Act 1999 and including digital currency in the definition of
financial supply in A New Tax System (Goods and Services Tax) Regulations 1999.
38
39
See for example: Taxpayers Australia Limited, Submission 9, pp. [2][6]; Name withheld,
Submission 11, pp. [2][3].
40
35
4.38
A number of submitters raised concerns about the ATO's ruling that digital
currencies should be treated as property, rather than money, in relation to paying
wages and salaries and the application of FBT. The Bitcoin Foundation and Bitcoin
Association of Australia were aware of a number of international businesses that have
started paying their employees in Bitcoin. Australian businesses subject to FBT would
face a further barrier when competing for global talent. 41 The Tax Institute proposed a
legislative change to clarify that salary and wages paid in digital currency is not a
fringe benefit for tax purposes. Taxpayers Australia also raised concerns about the
FBT regime applying to digital currency and expressed the view that 'further
consideration of the degree of integration into the PAYG withholding system, the
superannuation and other employment tax obligation regimes will need to be made in
respect of digital currencies'. 42
4.39
The Australian Digital Currency Commerce Association (ADCCA), a group
representing the Australian digital currency industry, argued that the definition of
currency in both the Income Tax Act and the GST Act should be expanded to include
digital currency. It noted that:
including a definition of Digital Currency, and classifying it in the same
way as foreign currency in Australian tax law will ensure that the use of
Digital Currency as a method of payment alongside fiat currency is not
rendered obsolete before it has had a chance to enter the mainstream
payment system and be tested by the market. 43
4.40
4.41
Alternatively, Professor Stewart and Mr Emery from Tax and Transfer Policy
Institute disagreed with the view that digital currencies should be treated as foreign
currencies for the purposes of income tax, fringe benefits tax and capital gains tax. In
their view:
It is unlikely that characterising digital currencies as money under the
income tax regime would be particularly beneficial for users in respect of
the application of ordinary income, capital gains tax and foreign currency
rules. Indeed, treating digital currencies as foreign money under the income
tax regime may add unnecessary complexity, with no gain for the ATO and
digital currency users. This [is] because foreign currency is generally
treated as a form of capital asset leading to CGT or income tax
41
42
43
44
36
consequences in any event under the income tax law. The consequences of
disposing of digital currency for foreign currency, and disposing of a
commodity, are broadly similar. 45
4.42
Professor Stewart and Mr Emery did not consider that there was any clear
policy basis for characterising digital currencies as money for income tax purposes at
this point in time. Instead, they argued that further research and analysis were
necessary before making any amendments to the income tax law in this regard. 46
4.43
Ms Kate Preston advised that Treasury was monitoring digital currencies,
noting that:
[Treasury] will continue to assess the environment, but I would stress that it
is an industry in its infancy. So I think that it is a little bit early in the
process to jump in and suggest that there should be changes to the tax law
to accommodate it. 47
Committee view
4.44
In the committee's view, further research and analysis should be conducted
into whether digital currency should be treated in the same manner as foreign
currencies for the purposes of income tax and fringe benefits. As noted in chapter 2,
the Australian government is currently examining Australia's taxation system as part
of the taxation white paper process.
Recommendation 2
4.45
The committee recommends that further examination of appropriate tax
treatment of digital currencies should be included in the taxation white paper
process, with particular regard to income tax and fringe benefits tax.
45
Professor Miranda Stewart and Mr Joel Emery, The Tax and Transfer Policy Institute,
Australian National University, Submission 23, p. 15.
46
Professor Miranda Stewart and Mr Joel Emery, The Tax and Transfer Policy Institute,
Australian National University, Submission 23, p. 15.
47
Chapter 5
Regulatory frameworks
5.1
One of the concerns raised in evidence about digital currencies is that they are
largely unregulated. This chapter examines the unique challenges that digital
currencies have created for regulators, including how to maintain the integrity of the
financial system while creating a regulatory environment that encourages innovation.
This chapter will focus on two separate, but overlapping, regulatory issues:
how digital currency payments facilities fit within the current payments
system regulations.
38
5.7
Mr Chris Mountford, a software engineer at Australian software company
Atlassian, was worried that 'kneejerk reactions to regulation fuelled by headlines and
hysteria will obviously endanger innovation in Australia and push FinTech companies
offshore'. 5 Similarly, mHITs Limited warned against overregulation. 6
5.8
Mr Antonopoulos maintained that 'regulation of the protocol itself is not really
possible at this time'. 7 The Chamber of Digital Commerce outlined the importance of
understanding the distinction between digital currencies and the underlying
technology or protocol when developing public policy:
not all that is labelled as a 'currency' in fact functions as a currency. In
particular, it is important that we avoid imposing onerous and commercially
unproductive burdens on those who work with the protocol, developing and
deploying applications, and who do not use crypto-currencies as a medium
of exchange. 8
5.9
Ripple Labs also noted that 'as pure technologies, these protocols cannot
themselves be regulated. However, the entities that make use of the protocols to buy,
sell, or exchange those virtual or fiat currencies can be subject to regulation'. 9
5.10
PayPal drew a distinction between digital currencies and the intermediary
companies that trade or facilitate transactions in digital currencies:
While the currency itself should not be regulated, and transactions by
individual users without the assistance of intermediaries should not be
regulated, companies that provide a financial service for digital currency
transmission, for issuance or sale of digital currency, or for exchange with
other currencies such as the Australian Dollar, should be regulated in a
manner similar to the existing regulations that apply to other payment
services. Those regulations, however, should be adapted to recognise the
specific details of how different digital currencies work, particularly
'decentralised' digital currencies that are not controlled by a specific
issuer. 10
5.11
Furthermore, PayPal observed that the distributed ledger technology has many
potential applications that do not involve payments. As such the 'government should
clarify that non-payments applications will not be subject to payments regulation'. 11
10
11
39
(b)
(c)
5.13
ASIC's view is that digital currency does not fit within these legal definitions,
and digital currencies are not financial products. This means that a person does not
need:
(a)
(b)
12
13
14
15
16
40
'imposing the same obligations on digital currency businesses as those for companies
holding funds, lending [and] offering financial advice'. 17
5.17
However, ASIC noted that if digital currencies were treated in the same way
as foreign currency, they would not automatically be considered a financial product
under the Corporations Act. 18 For example, credit facilities and foreign exchange
contracts that are settled immediately are considered financial products for the
purposes of the ASIC Act, but not the Corporations Act. 19
5.18
ASIC advised that its understanding was that contracts for exchanging
national currency for digital currency through online platforms or ATMs are typically
settled immediately, and the normal licensing and disclosure requirements under the
Corporations Act would not apply to digital currency exchanges. However, if digital
currencies were treated as foreign currencies, digital currency would be subject to the
consumer protection provisions of the ASIC Act, as foreign exchange contracts that
are settled immediately are considered financial products. 20 The definition of financial
products varies slightly between the Corporations Act and the ASIC Act. This means
that while a person may have to comply with the general consumer protection
obligations under the ASIC Act, they may not be subject to the licensing, conduct and
disclosure rules in the Corporations Act.
5.19
ASIC noted that there were no meaningful differences between the consumer
protection provisions in the ASIC Act and the Competition and Consumer Act 2010. 21
ASIC and the ACCC are able to refer powers to each other in cases of regulatory
overlap, where it is considered more appropriate for matters within one regulator's
jurisdiction to be dealt with by the other regulator. 22
Should digital currencies be treated as financial products?
5.20
As digital currency exchanges are generally settled immediately, even if the
decision were made to treat digital currency as currency, they would not necessarily
be considered financial products under the Corporations Act. ASIC explained that if
digital currencies were subject to the licensing, conduct, and disclosure rules in the
Corporations Act, they would need to be defined in the regulations of the Corporations
Act as financial products, or something akin to financial products. Mr Saadat, ASIC,
noted that under the current legal definition:
A digital currency, in and of itself, is not a financial product. Providing
advice about a digital currency is not financial product advice, buying and
selling digital currency means you are not making a market in a financial
17
18
19
20
21
22
41
product. But some ancillary services you might provide that are associated
with digital currencies could be regulated by ASIC. 23
5.21
ASIC advised the committee that extending the definition of financial
products under the Corporations Act and the ASIC Act to digital currencies, such as
Bitcoin, would not be straightforward as the decentralised framework means that the
normal obligations on product issuers cannot be imposed. 24 For example, if digital
currency were to be included in the financial services regulatory regime, product
disclosure obligations may need to be tailored to clarify that digital currencies do not
have an identifiable 'issuer'. 25
5.22
If digital currencies were declared financial products, trading platforms may
need to hold Australian market licences. The compliance costs of obtaining and
maintaining an Australian market licence may be too burdensome for digital currency
trading platforms and encourage businesses to move offshore. 26 Mr Saadat explained:
I think the difficulty in regulating the trading platforms like traditional
markets is that the compliance obligations that are associated with running
a traditional financial market are quite high. The bar is set quite high. I
think it is likely that if you were simply to apply the existing framework to
platforms that sell digital currency, most would find it uneconomic to
sustain in Australia. And because the market for these bitcoins is global, a
lot of that activity would move offshore and Australian consumers would
probably still end up being able to speculate with digital currency by buying
and selling on foreign trading platforms. 27
5.23
Also, if digital currencies were declared financial products, a number of
industry participants, including overseas entities that deal with Australian based
buyers and sellers, may be required to obtain Australian financial services (AFS)
licences as they would be providing financial products. This may cause difficulties for
digital currency businesses, as well as ASIC, as it may be difficult to determine that a
person does not require an AFS licence because they do not provide services to
Australian clients. 28 Mr Saadat stated:
it is not straightforward to regulate digital currencies like financial
products. You would have to solve a number of unique issues associated
with digital currencies, and also the industry would probably look for a
23
24
25
26
27
28
42
more tailored regulatory regime that makes the industry still commercially
feasible in this country. 29
5.25
Mr Lucas Cullen, Bitcoin Brisbane, pointed out that consumers should take
the care when purchasing digital currencies, particularly from offshore exchanges, the
same way they would for any online purchase. His advice to people wanting to buy
digital currency was that 'you have to work out who you are dealing with and if these
companies are reputable. Perhaps you should start small and only risk the amount of
money you can afford to losejust like any transaction on the internet'. 31
5.26
A chartered accountant and crypto-currency enthusiast, suggested that
consumers should be encouraged to educate themselves about the risks of digital
currencies. He stated:
Regulation and consumer protection should focus on education. Upon being
approached by potential users, nodes of entry, e.g. online exchanges and
ATMs, should be required to issue warnings about the risks involved in the
digital currency space, including the potential for scams and financial loss
and the irreversibility of transactions. This could be similar to the warnings
that fund managers, brokerages and money transfer providers are required
to issue for many of their products. 32
Committee view
5.27
The committee understands that digital currency is currently covered by the
consumer protection provisions under the Competition and Consumer Act 2010. The
committee considers that, as discussed later in this chapter, further research should be
conducted before any change to this arrangement is made, such as designating digital
currency as either a foreign currency or a financial product.
29
30
31
32
43
5.32
In relation to the payments system, the Australian Bankers' Association's
(ABA) broad position on emerging technologies was that the authorities should
consider whether the 'regulatory oversight that is already provided for the established
33
34
35
36
37
38
44
5.34
APCA argued that it is 'prudent to ensure that the regulatory framework can
respond to new payment methods as they develop'. 41 APCA supported the conclusion
of the Financial System Inquiry that regulators, such as the RBA, should review the
extent to which:
their current powers enable them to regulate system and service providers
using alternative mediums of exchange to national currencies, such as
digital currencies. The Payment Systems (Regulation) Act 1998 empowers
the [Payment System Board] PSB to regulate 'funds transfer systems that
facilitate the circulation of money'. It is not clear that the PSB can regulate
payment systems involving alternative mediums of exchange that are not
national currencies. Currently, national currencies are the only instruments
widely used to fulfil the economic functions of moneythat is, as a store of
value, a medium of exchange and a unit of account. 42
5.35
The RBA, under the regulatory framework of the Payment Systems
(Regulation) Act 1998, 'does not automatically have to license payment systemsthey
can developbut, at the point where the RBA thinks they represent a stability issue, it
can then designate and regulate over the payment system'. 43
5.36
MasterCard submitted that any regulation should be technology neutral to
ensure that with advancements in technology, regulations will apply to all new
39
Mr Tony Pearson, Australian Bankers' Association, Committee Hansard, 7 April 2015, p. 20.
40
Mr Tony Pearson, Australian Bankers' Association, Committee Hansard, 7 April 2015, p. 25.
41
42
The Australian Government the Treasury, Financial System Inquiry: Final report,
November 2014, p. 166.
43
45
payment service providers. 44 The Financial System Inquiry also recommended that
regulation should aim to be technology neutral. 45
Graduated regulation
5.37
The Financial System Inquiry supported broadening regulation to include
services involving alternative mediums of exchange, such as digital currencies. It
recommended graduated regulation for purchased payment facilities 'to enable market
entry and ensure regulation is targeted to where it is most needed. At times, this may
increase risks for some consumers, but it is expected to improve consumer outcomes
overall'. 46
5.38
Mr Saadat, ASIC, noted that the current framework is already graduated in the
way the Financial System Inquiry recommended. He advised the committee that there
are already a number of exemptions for low-value facilities, for example:
a non-cash payment facility where you can make and receive payments
of digital currencyand if that facility only allows you to makelowvalue payments, then there is relief in place that means that those kinds of
providers do not need a licence from ASIC. 47
5.39
APCA supported the Financial System Inquiry's recommendation to develop a
graduated regulatory framework. 48 Mr Hamilton, APCA, noted the 'idea is that you do
not want to take something that is still very small and stifle it with the full protection
appropriate to a system which touches millions of consumers'. 49
5.40
PayPal also supported the Financial System Inquiry's recommendation. It
stated:
regulation should be graduated so that new startup companies can
introduce new services to the market without the full weight of regulation,
but the companies would also know to begin planning right away to build
out all the appropriate internal controls and compliance programs. 50
44
45
The Australian Government the Treasury, Financial System Inquiry: Final report,
November 2014, p. 146.
46
The Australian Government the Treasury, Financial System Inquiry: Final report,
November 2014, p. 146.
47
48
49
50
46
5.41
Ripple Labs also supported a tiered regulatory regime to support innovation. It
suggested:
Under such a scheme, smaller entrepreneurial companies could operate
under a registration system, with lighter requirements than more established
and larger players. Businesses operating above a certain threshold (in terms
of risk and volume) could be required to obtain licenses to operate, with the
full panoply of regulatory requirements, regular examinations and
permissions. 51
ePayments Code
5.42
The Financial System Inquiry recommended making the ePayments Code
mandatory. The Code is currently voluntary and extending it to all service providers
would 'help protect all consumers from fraud and unauthorised transactions'. 52
5.43
(b)
(c)
(d)
(e)
(f)
(g)
complaints procedures. 53
5.44
Mr Saadat noted that PayPal had 'recently come out and said that others
should also be subscribing to the code from both a consumer protection perspective
and a level playing field perspective'. 54
5.45
ASIC suggested if the ePayments Code was made mandatory, serious
consideration would need to be given to how it would apply to services involving
digital currency. 55 Mr Saadat noted that the application of the ePayments Code would
depend on the nature of the digital currency business. For example the Code would
not apply to digital currency trading platforms, but it may cover non-cash payments
providers that facilitate online payments using digital currency. 56
51
52
The Australian Government the Treasury, Financial System Inquiry: Final report,
November 2014, p. 167.
53
54
55
56
47
Self-regulation
5.46
Treasury noted that the digital currency industry is not objecting to regulation.
Mr McAuliffe, Treasury, stated 'in fact, it is a situation where, the industry,
domestically, is trying to do self-regulation that in some respects mirrors some of the
actual legal requirements, because they see that there is benefit in having a selfregulatory model'. 57
5.47
ADCCA recommended a self-regulatory model for the digital currency
businesses:
ADCCA believes a self-regulatory model enforced through its industry
Code of Conduct, to which ADCCA members must adhere, is the ideal
regulatory environment to support the Digital Currency industry. This
framework will enable customers to have greater confidence in the entities
providing Digital Currency FinTech services. The Code of Conduct
comprises several best practice requirements benchmarked against
requirements for Australian financial services institutions. 58
5.48
Mr Guzowski, ABA technology, noted that ADCCA's approach is to put
standards on the industry and implement standards in the software, when the industry
is starting. He explained that this approach would mean that digital currency
businesses could be prepared 'rather than have some standards come in place or
regulations come into place when the industry is already in full swing, which is much
harder to implement and will cause disruption to services'. 59
5.49
Adroit Lawyers, a law firm specialising in Bitcoin and digital currency,
supported the concept of self-regulation, given the unique characteristics of digital
currency technology and the challenges it presents to the current regulatory
framework. It cautioned, however, that:
the ultimate regulatory framework needs to achieve a balance between
mitigating risks to consumers and the wider market, and keeping the
barriers to entry low enough to encourage innovation and growth in the
digital currency industry.
This balance will only be achieved through ongoing consultation and
collaboration between the industry, the government and regulatory bodies
including ASIC. 60
5.50
The Bitcoin Foundation and Bitcoin Association of Australia noted that any
regulatory framework would need to focus on regulating for innovation, regardless of
whether it was industry based self-regulation or government regulation. 61
57
58
59
60
61
48
5.51
Ripple Labs believed that digital currency businesses should implement best
practices, including terms of use, where appropriate, such as:
(1) any fees charged to consumers, (2) contact information and address, (3)
the business's dispute resolution process, (4) description of protection
against unauthorized transactions, (5) efforts around privacy and security,
(6) customer services, and (7) chargeback policy. 62
5.52
Ripple Labs predicted that eventually 'the good actors (i.e., virtual currency
businesses that comply with the regulatory regime on digital currency) will be
distinguished from the bad actors (i.e., businesses that operate anonymous exchanges)
and it will be easier for users to detect fraudulent scams'. 63
5.55
Mr Saadat noted that as digital currencies have not entered the mainstream a
'reasonable view might be to wait and assess whether further action is required'. 66 He
stated:
I suppose there is a bit of a chicken-and-egg issue around whether you
wait for something like that to happen before you decide what regulatory
framework you should apply, or you try and come up with a regulatory
framework in anticipation of that occurring. I do not think there is an easy
62
63
64
65
66
49
5.56
5.57
APCA recommended that the newly-formed Australian Payments Council has
a 'critical role in advising how to deal with new entrants and new technologies to
minimise the potential for ill-considered interventions by public regulators'. 70
Need for further information
5.58
Mr Antonopoulos explained that there is a lot of uncertainty surrounding
digital currencies as 'we are dealing with a very disruptive and fast-moving
technology that has only recently emerged into the limelight'. He noted:
We do not really know where Bitcoin coin will be in a couple of years, in
terms of whether it will be used primarily as a long-term store valueakin
to a digital goldfor transactions involving large parties or, as I would like
to say, the kind of currency used to buy aircraft carriers with, or if it will
turn into a currency that is used for microtransactions and retail transactions
and consumer online commercethe kind of currency you use to buy a cup
of coffeeor perhaps fill in both of those at the same time. There are many
unanswered questions at the moment. 71
5.59
There has been research conducted using the Bitcoin distributed ledger to
determine the nature of Bitcoin transactions. For example, Dr Dirk Baur, Dr KiHoon
Hong and Dr Adrian Lee from the Finance Discipline Group, University of
Technology, Sydney provided a submission outlining their research using the Bitcoin
distributed ledger. Their research found that there was a trend towards investment
with a minority of users using Bitcoin as a medium of exchange. 72 Dr Carmody,
Westpac, noted that research that has been conducted using the Bitcoin distributed
ledger, suggested that 25 to 50 percent of the transactions that take place each day are
67
68
69
70
71
72
50
made by people investing and trading in Bitcoin, rather than as payments for goods
and services. 73
5.60
Mr Hamilton, APCA, noted the 'striking' lack of information about the levels
of activity in digital currencies. APCA suggested that additional research in this area
would be useful. Mr Hamilton noted that it would be a 'valuable undertaking to
actually get a handle on how much volume and value there was relative to the
mainstream payment systemwhat gets measured, gets managed'. 74
5.61
Similarly, Mr Pearson, ABA, noted that it is difficult to make a definitive
statement on the most appropriate regulatory framework, until more information has
been gathered. 75 He noted that 'you really need to understand the size and role of these
emerging players vis--vis the established industry to be able to then make the next
step, which is how to most appropriately regulate it'. 76 Mr Pearson commented that the
UK government's approach seemed to be to invest 'the money into research to gather
the information as a first step to see if it is appropriate to then move to the next step,
which would be to bring these new technologies and new frontiers within the existing
regulatory system'. 77 He suggested the RBA may be the appropriate agency to gather
this information. 78
5.62
Mr Kendall, APCA, reasoned that 'the more data that we have available the
better we will know what level the transactions might be of some concern'. 79 Ripple
Labs view was that the government should seek to clarify the actual risks and
opportunities presented by different digital currency businesses. 80
Committee view
5.63
The committee acknowledges the need for a clear regulatory approach for
both consumers and the digital currency industry. The committee considered concerns
raised by submitters about the negative effect overregulation would have at this early
stage in the development of the industry. In this respect, the central concern was any
regulatory framework should balance the need to mitigate risks facing consumers and
the broader financial system, while still encouraging innovation and growth in the
industry by keeping the barriers to entry low. As the digital currency industry is still in
its early stages, the committee supports a 'wait-and-see' approach to government
regulation. The committee believes that the relevant government agencies should
closely monitor the development of the digital currency industry in Australia, and
73
74
75
Mr Tony Pearson, Australian Bankers' Association, Committee Hansard, 7 April 2015, p. 23.
76
Mr Tony Pearson, Australian Bankers' Association, Committee Hansard, 7 April 2015, p. 20.
77
Mr Tony Pearson, Australian Bankers' Association, Committee Hansard, 7 April 2015, p. 22.
78
Mr Tony Pearson, Australian Bankers' Association, Committee Hansard, 7 April 2015, p. 22.
79
80
51
conduct further research to determine the actual risks and opportunities presented by
different types of digital currency businesses, for example Bitcoin exchanges and
ATMs, or payment facilities. The committee supports ADCCA's continued
development of industry best practices based on the standards set for financial services
and payments services. This self-regulation model should be developed in
consultation with government agencies, as well relevant stakeholders in the banking,
finance and payments sectors. The committee considers that this will ensure that
businesses are prepared for regulatory oversight in the future, as the industry expands
and grows.
Recommendation 3
5.64
The committee recommends that the Australian government consider
establishing a Digital Economy Taskforce to gather further information on the
uses, opportunities and risks associated with digital currencies. This will enable
regulators, such as the Reserve Bank of Australia and ASIC, to monitor and
determine if and when it may be appropriate to regulate certain digital currency
businesses. In the meantime, the committee supports ADCCA's continued
development of a self-regulation model, in consultation with government
agencies.
Chapter 6
Anti-money laundering and counter-terrorism financing
regime
6.1
The Attorney-General's Department is currently conducting a statutory review
of the Anti-Money Laundering and Counter-Terrorism Financing Act 2006
(AML/CTF Act) which is considering the emergence of digital currencies and whether
they should be brought within Australia's AML/CTF regime. 1
6.2
In this chapter, the committee considers whether digital currencies should be
brought within the AML/CTF regime.
6.5
The Melbourne Bitcoin Technology Center noted that its members had
indicated that many individuals and businesses had experienced discrimination and
refusal of service by Australian banks. It proposed legislation to make it an offence for
banks to discriminate against a customer on the basis that they are trading or
transacting in Bitcoin. 4
6.6
mHITs Limited, an Australian-based mobile money service company, was
concerned that some banks and payment industry members were overstating the risks
and downplaying the opportunities that digital currencies represent. 5 It stated:
The currently regulatory framework and the statutory review were discussed in chapter 2.
54
6.7
ASIC's submission noted that it was 'aware of a number of banks taking steps
to cease dealing with Bitcoin related businesses due to concerns that digital currency
providers pose an unacceptable level of risk to the banks' business and reputation'.
ASIC advised that it 'does not have any power to intervene in decisions made by
businesses in relation to digital currencies, and considers that this is a matter for the
banks and businesses involved'. 7
Mr Bezzi, from the ACCC, advised the committee that he was aware of one
case in the ACCC's records where a company involved in digital currency transactions
had had its accounts closed by a bank, because the business that the company was
involved in was not consistent with the bank's policies. Mr Bezzi noted that the
ACCC's view is that 'it is up to banks to determine who they want to have as their
customers'. He noted further that the ACCC had no evidence of collusion between
banks on the issue of providing banking services to digital currency businesses. 8
6.8
6.9
Mr Miller, Bit Trade Australia, explained why his business complies with
regulations that do not currently cover digital currencies:
We are dependent on our banking relationships. We have worked closely
with them to achieve a level of comfort for them because we require the
ability to bank in the Australian banking sector. We have mirrored their
safe harbour practices. We will require you to provide photo ID. We will
require you to provide proof of current residential address and date of
birth. 9
6.10
Dr Carmody, Westpac, was supportive of the approach by ADCCA to develop
best practices for digital currency businesses that replicate, as far as they are able, the
same sorts of safe-harbour obligations that would apply to a bank or to a foreign
exchange broker. In his view, this approach assists banks comply with their
obligations. He suggested that perhaps the 'sorts of businesses that have been unable
to get access to banking accounts are those that have been unable to demonstrate that
they are doing that level of due diligence'. 10 He noted that these best practices were
not in place when digital currency businesses were first opening up in Australia. He
remarked that in the 'early days' the only thing that a customer may have been required
to provide in order to purchase Bitcoin was a Bitcoin wallet address and an email
address, which did not necessarily identify the customer. He noted:
Mr Jonathon Miller, Bit Trade Australia, Committee Hansard, 7 April 2015, pp. 1516.
10
55
In that scenario, it is fair to say that there is not a whole lot of know-yourcustomer going on. A business operating like that would present a real
challenge for a bank to provide banking services to because they cannot get
satisfied that the underlying business is understood. I think there has been a
lot of work from a number of businesses to try and move well beyond that
and do the appropriate level of due diligence, which is something we would
certainly support. 11
6.11
Dr Carmody further explained that he supported digital currency businesses
coming under the AML/CTF regime. He noted:
From the point of view of a bank that is providing banking services, if we
cannot satisfy ourselves that we can do all the things that we have to do
under the legislation to understand the nature of the transactions and what is
going on there, it puts us in a very difficult position to be able to provide
those banking services. The issues are particularly intense when it comes to
moving payments internationally, because obviously we have counterpart
banks to deal with globally and they have got their own anti-moneylaundering, counter-terrorism-finance obligations, and they will expect us to
understand the nature of the payments as well. 12
6.12
PayPal explained that it had chosen to partner with BitPay, Coinbase and
GoCoin as all three companies had taken steps to develop anti-money laundering
programs and to ensure they know their customers. PayPal noted that it was
proceeding gradually in its approach to digital currencies, so it could ensure that while
embracing innovation it remained committed to making payments safer and more
reliable for customers. PayPal noted that while all users of PayPal were linked to a
specific named PayPal account, with consumer protection for buyers, these standards
were not currently required for payments using Bitcoin. 13
6.13
The ABA noted that banks and other participants that operate within the
regulated payments systems have made significant investments in processes and
technologies in order to meet their requirements under the AML/CTF regime. As
digital currency does not currently come under this regime they are not required to
meet these standards and operational requirements. 14 MasterCard maintained that any
regulation should include 'obligations to perform KYC [know your customer],
maintain an Anti-Money-Laundering and Counter Terrorist Financing program, file
suspicious activity reports, and address cybersecurity. 15
6.14
Dr Carmody, Westpac, noted that digital currency intermediaries are
providing similar services to businesses that are regulated under the AML/CTF
regime. He observed:
11
12
13
14
15
56
I would see a very close analogy between the business a foreign exchange
broker is carrying on, and a company that is in the business of buying and
selling Bitcoin for cash. It is just that under the definitions of the current
AML framework foreign currency broking is included as a designated
service but Bitcoin broking is not. 16
6.15
In its submission the Attorney-General's Department noted that the ABA and
the Australian Financial Conference (AFC) had made submissions to the statutory
review of the AML/CTF Act. Both the ABA and the AFC expressed concern that
financial institutions were being placed in a vulnerable position when offering
designated services to digital currency businesses, and recommended that trading in
digital currencies should be listed as a designated service under the AML/CTF Act. 17
The ABA also recommended that the statutory review consider whether all digital
currency payments mechanisms should be brought under the AML/CTF regime. 18
Know your customer programs
6.16
Under the AML/CTF regime, businesses must ensure that they know their
customers and understand their customers' financial activities. Under the AML/CTF
business must monitor transactions and collect and verify customer identification
informationfor example, documents, data or other information obtained from a
reliable and independent source. The 'know your customer' (KYC) and customer due
diligence processes increase the ability of businesses to better identify and mitigate
money laundering and terrorism financing risks in the conduct of their transactions. 19
6.17
Dr Carmody explained the advantages of digital currencies coming under the
AML/CTF regime, in relation to know your customer requirements:
There was an example given about a bitcoin broker who might have had a
bank account with the Commonwealth Bank. If a cash payment came in
then the bank would know, presumably, with the purchase of bitcoin. That
is about all we would know. That is why there are a lot of advantages in the
know-your-customer and due-diligence obligations also sitting with the
broker, because the broker who has facilitated that purchase for the
customer would also know, for example the wallet address that the
customer used. Where they received that bitcoin that is not something the
bank would know. If that did prove to be associated with suspicious
activity, that would then be something that could be provided under
requests from law-enforcement authorities.
I think the phrase that has been used in some of the previous inquiries is onramps and off-ramps. It is very much that. If you are relying on trying to get
visibility of the on-ramps and off-ramps only, through the bank part of the
16
17
18
19
57
transaction, you do not really see that linkage to the bitcoin wallet. I know
Bit Trade and others like them are endeavouring to put that same sort of
know-your-customer monitoring within their activities as well. That makes
a lot of sense. 20
20
21
22
23
24
25
Mr Jonathon Miller, Bit Trade Australia, Committee Hansard, 7 April 2015, p. 16.
26
Mr Jonathon Miller, Bit Trade Australia, Committee Hansard, 7 April 2015, p. 16.
27
58
6.23
Mr Mossop noted one of the difficulties with digital currencies is peer-to-peer
transfers as it means transactions using digital currencies can be made directly to
people anywhere in the world. He explained that this creates a particular challenge
when working out how to regulate digital currencies:
While we might have some visibility of the on-ramps and off-ramps in the
places where they intersect directly with the financial sector, short of
having everybody who has a bitcoin and makes a transaction report to
AUSTRAC, it is going to be very difficult to find a point where all those
transactions are co-located in a way they can be reported.
So that is a big challenge for us, because we are going to lose visibility of
how these bitcoins move around once they are inside the bitcoin system.
We can see people buying them, we can see people selling them to a large
extent, but we lose visibility of what happens within the system. 29
6.24
Mr Mossop explained that there was still work to do to determine exactly
which digital currency businesses should be brought under the AML/CTF regime. 30
Internationally, countries such as Canada, Singapore and the UK have decided to
bring digital currency exchanges under their equivalent AML/CTF regimes.
Mr Mossop noted that one of the considerations in the statutory review is how to
define digital currency exchanges, and whether they should be defined as businesses
that buy and sell digital currency, or if the definition should also include businesses
that facilitate peer-to-peer exchanges, such as Bitcoin ATMs. 31
Finding the right balance
6.25
Mr Mossop explained that an additional challenge was figuring out how to
regulate digital currencies without stifling the growth of the industry. Regulators need
to find a balance between trying to mitigate risks while allowing the more positive
uses of digital currency to develop. 32
28
29
30
31
32
59
6.26
DFAT was concerned about the application of AML/CTF regulations
worldwide on small-value transactions that are predominantly made by people in
poverty. Ms Rebecca Bryant, DFAT, explained that these small-value transaction are
being made by:
itinerant workers who want to send money across specific corridors home
to family and friends. In many instances they are unable to do that because
they cannot show adequate identification. It is worse than that in a sense,
because even people with identification today are having trouble
transferring money across corridors that are considered risky. 33
6.27
Ms Bryant, raised concerns that this would lead to people using black-market
providers, outside the regulatory framework:
And that is the danger: the more money you push into those corridors the
less transparency you have. You do not know how much it is. You do not
know who it is being transferred from and to. So, if money is pushed out of
the formal systemI am not suggesting that it is excessive regulationyou
will not see it. You cannot see it; you do not know where it is going. And
that is the real concern. 34
6.28
The Justice and International Mission Unit, Synod of Victoria and Tasmania,
Uniting Church of Australia supported the regulation of digital currencies under the
AML/CTF regime to ensure they are not used for serious criminal activities. It also
noted potential benefits for financial inclusion. It noted that the FATF is an
intergovernmental body that develops and promotes policies to protect the global
financial system against money laundering and terrorism financing. In particular, the
FATF aims to support countries and financial institutions in designing AML/CFT
measures that meet the national goal of financial inclusion, without compromising the
measures that exist for the purpose of combating crime. It noted that:
FATF has stated that it recognises that applying an overly cautious response
to AML/CFT safeguards can have the unintended consequence of excluding
legitimate businesses and consumers from the financial system, thereby
compelling them to use services that are not subject to regulatory and
supervisory oversight. They argue the AML/CFT controls must not inhibit
access to formal financial services for financially excluded and unbanked
persons. The FATF recognises that financial exclusion could undermine the
effectiveness [of] an AML/CFT regime. Hence, financial inclusion and
AML/CFT should be seen as serving complementary objectives. 35
33
34
35
Justice and International Mission Unit, Synod of Victoria and Tasmania, Uniting Church of
Australia, Submission 30, p. 3.
60
Legislative changes
6.29
AUSTRAC advised that in order to cover digital currency in the AML/CTF
regime, it would be necessary to change the Act not just the regulations. 36
Ms Jane Atkins, AUSTRAC, explained that although designated services can be
added to the AML/CTF Act by regulation there would be other more complex
consequential changes to be made if the decision was made to cover digital currencies.
'Obviously, the [statutory] review is the logical place to be looking at that and looking
at what needs to be done'. 37
6.30
AUSTRAC recognised that digital currency may pose a potential risk in the
future, noting 'but right now we are not seeing that there is the sort of risk that has us
saying to government, "It is imperative that you give us sight over this'''. 38 Ms Atkins,
AUSTRAC, outlined the requirements for designated services under the AML/CTF
regime:
The sort of obligations in our act then are for them to have an anti-money
laundering and counter-terrorism financing program, which means that they
need to assess the risks of money laundering for their customers and the
types of transactions that they are dealing with. They have to have a
program in place to mitigate those risks. They have to carry out know your
customer procedures with their customers. They have to have ongoing due
diligence programs around watching whether their customers risk is going
up and down and whether they need to do more than they have done before.
They need transaction monitoring systems so that they can report whatever
equivalentperhaps you would have an equivalent of $10,000 digital
currency. You might have a report about that and you might have a report
where they were transmitting internationally, as we talked about. If they are
going to transact in the same way as what we would call remittance
providers transact, then there would seem to be at the momentoff the top
of my headno policy reason why you would not cover them in the same
way. We would certainly want suspicious matter reporting. 39
6.31
Mr Mossop, Attorney-General's Department, noted that the pace of innovation
makes it difficult to anticipate where the technology will go and where it will lead.
'We need to regulate in a way that prevents having to come back and regulate again in
a relatively short amount of time for a new product that comes out'. 40
36
Ms Jane Atkins, Australian Transaction Reports and Analysis Centre, Committee Hansard,
7 April 2015, p. 57.
37
Ms Jane Atkins, Australian Transaction Reports and Analysis Centre, Committee Hansard,
7 April 2015, p. 57.
38
Ms Jane Atkins, Australian Transaction Reports and Analysis Centre, Committee Hansard,
7 April 2015, p. 52.
39
Ms Jane Atkins, Australian Transaction Reports and Analysis Centre, Committee Hansard,
7 April 2015, pp. 5657.
40
61
6.32
ADCCA outlined the views of Australian digital currency businesses. It
stated:
In Australia the vast majority of Digital Currency businesses and users are
law-abiding and desire the enhanced legitimacy of appropriate legal
oversight and recognition. Incorporating Digital Currency into law
enforcement legislation, particularly through the Anti-Money Laundering
and Counter-Terrorism Financing Act 2006, is a necessary step toward
guaranteeing the security and legitimacy of Digital Currencies in
Australia. 41
6.33
Bitcoin Group Limited stated that it fully anticipates the 'costs associated with
being subject to compliance protocols and the likelihood of the obligations from
national laws requiring access to our records and compelling our company to actively
monitor and proactively report suspicious transaction activity'. 42
6.34
Given that digital currencies are a global phenomenon, the Attorney-General's
Department emphasised the importance of ongoing international cooperation through
forums such as the Financial Action Task Force. It argued international cooperation
was essential to developing a consistent international approach to regulation to avoid
the risk of regulatory arbitrage, where businesses take advantage of more favourable
regulations in other jurisdictions. 43
Committee view
6.35
In order to help manage relationships with banking services and be prepared
for future regulation, some digital currency businesses have tried to mirror the
obligations that are required by designated services under the AML/CTF regime, such
as implementing know your customer programs. However, the AML/CTF Act
currently does not cover digital currencies that are not backed by precious metal or
bullion. 44 Consequently, digital currency businesses are not able to access the
Document Verification Service which would better facilitate identity checking to meet
AML/CTF requirements. Furthermore, they currently stand outside this robust
regulatory regime designed to detect and deter money laundering and terrorism
financing.
6.36
The committee strongly supports applying AML/CTF regulation to digital
currency exchanges, noting that similar steps have been taken in Canada, the UK and
Singapore. The committee notes that the Attorney-General's Department is currently
conducting a statutory review of the AML/CTF Act which is examining whether
digital currency businesses should be brought under the AML/CTF regime, and if so
which businesses should be included.
41
42
43
44
62
Recommendation 4
6.37
The committee recommends that the statutory review considers applying
AML/CTF regulations to digital currency exchanges.
Appendix 1
Submissions and additional information received
Submission
Submitter
Number
1
Mr Virgil Hesse
Name Withheld
Dr Shann Turnbull
Additional Information
Mr Robert Vong
Dr Pj Radcliffe
Mr Dario Di Pardo
10
11
Name Withheld
12
13
14
15
16
17
BitAwareAustralia
18
MasterCard
19
20
Veda
21
22
Ms Kelly McConnell
23
Professor Miranda Stewart and Mr Joel Emery, Tax and Transfer Policy
Institute
24
Mr Daniel Wilczynski
25
Mr Michael Asher
26
Name Withheld
27
Mr Frederick Malouf
28
Mr Michael Kean
Page 64
29
30
31
COEPTIS
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
Adroit Lawyers
40
Mr Chris Mountford
41
Coinbase
42
Attorney-General's Department
43
44
45
PayPal
Attachment 1
46
Dr Rhys Bollen
47
Mr Michael Haines
48
Attachment 1
mHITs Limited
Appendix 2
Public hearings and witnesses
CANBERRA, 26 NOVEMBER 2014
BORING, Ms Perianne, President and Founder, Chamber of Digital Commerce (USA)
CULLEN, Mr Lucas, Chief Executive Officer, Bitcoin Brisbane Pty Ltd
GUZOWSKI, Mr Christopher, Managing Director, ABA Technology Pty Ltd
PESCE, Mr Mark, Private capacity
SHAPIRO, Mr Adam, Director, Promontory Financial Group LLC
SOMMER, Mr Andrew, Partner, Clayton Utz
TUCKER, Mr Ronald, Chairman, Australian Digital Currency Commerce Association
ZHOU, Mr Kevin, Chief Economist, Buttercoin
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