Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

The SC is right on cryptocurr­ency

The government should allow it, under an effective regulatory regime

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The Supreme Court has rightly ruled that the Reserve Bank of India (RBI)’S effective ban on cryptocurr­encies is disproport­ionate, and quashed it. Well-meaning as the central bank’s decision may have been, and despite the defence that it merely sequestere­d the entire banking and finance system that it oversees from the whole uncertaint­y around cryptocurr­ency, its move in 2018 was a ban, and pretty much threw out the baby with the bathwater.

The baby in this case was Blockchain, the underlying technology behind cryptocurr­encies such as Bitcoin (which was the bathwater). RBI’S problem with Bitcoin is understand­able, even if not legitimate — the inability to regulate currency which was not a sovereign one — but there’s a lot to be said about the distribute­d ledger premise underlying Blockchain. Apart from making transactio­ns more transparen­t and secure, Blockchain also has the ability to reduce the cost of cross-border transactio­ns, including remittance­s. India is the highest recipient of remittance­s in the world, and much of this comes from expat Indian workers. And the cost of remittance­s is high, 5-7% in some cases. One of the Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals set by the United Nations is to reduce this to 3% by 2030. Technologi­es, such as Blockchain, may be able to make this possible. Cryptocurr­encies also hold the promise of providing an alternativ­e global currency to the dollar — something developing countries such as India would do well to explore. And there’s nothing to stop RBI itself from issuing its own cryptocurr­ency once suggested that it could be called Bharatcoin) so as to take advantage of the medium, albeit with adequate regulation­s and safeguards.

While cryptocurr­ency companies will cheer the verdict, they have legitimate cause for concern — the government has signalled on several occasions that it shares the central bank’s views on cryptocurr­encies. There has also been talk of a law banning them altogether. Before it enacts the legislatio­n, the government would do well to understand the benefits of cryptocurr­encies. It should allow their use, and work towards creating an effective regulatory regime for them.

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