The Reserve Bank of India has revealed that it is inclined to offer a basic central bank digital currency (CBDC) initially before implementing a more sophisticated version. It plans on doing this in order for the country's monetary policy framework, which at present does not allow any form or cryptocurrencies within its jurisdiction but allows them as long as international transactions involving only Indian Rupees will be used by banks under certain conditions.
The information given out today came after an interview where Dr. Subir Guha, 1st Chief Executive Officer & Managing Director IDBI Federal Life Insurance Company Ltd., spoke about how cryptocurrencies could potentially play into his company’s future strategy if handled correctly.
The report says, “A central bank digital currency (CBDC) provides many benefits over physical cash. In comparison with existing forms it can offer liquidity and scalability for users as well as an easy transaction process without any anonymity issues or faster settlement times."
The RBI is charting ways to implement a CBDC in phases and its initial recommendation is "to adopt basic models initially, with the hope that they will have minimal impact on monetary policy or banking systems."
The bank said it was concerned about the “dynamic impact” of a CBDC on macroeconomic policy making, but pointed out that India has made progress in payment systems and how this will provide a useful backbone to make their state-of-art currency available.
The report questions whether or not a CBDC will be general purpose and available for retail use (CBDC-R), or if it’s only going to serve as an investment tool. The design elements include exploring how the rollout of this new financial instrument should look like, what kind of regulations need implementing in order to make sure people don't get scammed when trading with cryptocurrencies using blockchain technology etc., which could take years depending on where you live around the world!
One day, people may all be paying with phones for the things that matter most. That is why Deputy Governor T Rabi Shankar thinks it’s so important and during a recent discussion at an Indian bank he said two types of CBDC are currently being developed - wholesale and retail-based; Wholesale was discussed more thoroughly but because this type has had less time to develop they would release their software first if approved while retail based needs some extra work before it can go live which could take longer than expected since there's been no approval yet on whether these funds will become legal tender or not.
The Indian government has had a complicated history with cryptocurrencies. In April 2018, the RBI notified banks not to support or engage in crypto transactions and effectively banned all trade until two years later when it was overruled by Supreme Court decision; this is just one example that shows how volatile these new technologies have been across different countries worldwide.
Cryptocurrencies are not all bad. The Indian government’s draft to regulate them, which has yet be made public and is likely heavily biased due its lack of transparency about what their intent really was when creating this bill in the first place as opposed to making clear decisions or intentions (considering some countries have banned cryptocurrency entirely), allows private cryptocurrencies with certain exceptions for promoting underlying technology while still prohibiting currencies being used.
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At least they are talking about it, here in Nigeria nothing is being said after the CBN decided to ban it.
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