According to Deep Tide TechFlow news on November 27, as reported by The Block, UK Chancellor of the Exchequer Rachel Reeves did not propose any new tax increases on Crypto Assets in the latest autumn statement, maintaining the same tax treatment for Crypto Assets as other asset classes. However, the government is pushing for stricter reporting and regulatory measures, including the upcoming implementation of the Crypto-Asset Reporting Framework (CARF) global tax transparency system in 2026.
Industry professionals welcome the entrepreneurial support measures but warn that the overall tax and regulatory environment in the UK may undermine its global competitiveness in the fintech and digital assets sectors. Experts are concerned that a lack of sufficient incentives may lead high-growth fintech, AI, and Web3 companies to choose to develop in other jurisdictions, further exacerbating the talent outflow phenomenon recently observed in the UK.
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The UK's Chancellor of the Exchequer's autumn statement did not increase encryption taxes, but regulation is tightening.
According to Deep Tide TechFlow news on November 27, as reported by The Block, UK Chancellor of the Exchequer Rachel Reeves did not propose any new tax increases on Crypto Assets in the latest autumn statement, maintaining the same tax treatment for Crypto Assets as other asset classes. However, the government is pushing for stricter reporting and regulatory measures, including the upcoming implementation of the Crypto-Asset Reporting Framework (CARF) global tax transparency system in 2026.
Industry professionals welcome the entrepreneurial support measures but warn that the overall tax and regulatory environment in the UK may undermine its global competitiveness in the fintech and digital assets sectors. Experts are concerned that a lack of sufficient incentives may lead high-growth fintech, AI, and Web3 companies to choose to develop in other jurisdictions, further exacerbating the talent outflow phenomenon recently observed in the UK.