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India Crypto Policy

Kartavya Desk Staff

Syllabus: Science and Technology

Source: IE

Context: A Trump-linked US firm, World Liberty Financial Inc (WLFI), has signed an MoU with Pakistan’s Crypto Council to develop a crypto-based financial system, prompting geopolitical and security concerns for India.

About India Crypto Policy:

Pakistan’s Crypto Pact with WLFI:

MoU Signed: Pakistan’s newly-formed Crypto Council and WLFI have agreed to introduce stablecoins, monetize rare earth assets, and position Pakistan as a regional crypto hub.

High-Level Support: Endorsed by PM Shehbaz Sharif and Army Chief Asim Munir, the deal includes use of blockchain for financial inclusion and trade.

Diaspora Link: Pakistan is leveraging its US-based diaspora to connect with Trump’s team and global crypto investors.

Strategic Risks to India:

Terror Financing via Crypto: The decentralized and pseudo-anonymous nature of cryptocurrencies makes them ideal for illicit financing, raising concerns akin to hawala networks, as highlighted by FATF.

Cross-border Laundering Risk: Crypto assets can bypass formal banking channels, enabling money laundering across jurisdictions—a threat amplified by Pakistan’s crypto pivot.

Geopolitical Influence Operations: Through crypto deals like the WLFI-Pakistan MoU, Islamabad is leveraging tech diplomacy to gain US favor, which could reduce India’s strategic tech advantage in the region.

Diaspora-led Influence Shift: Pakistan is actively using its US-based tech diaspora to establish crypto alliances—contrasting India’s diaspora focus on traditional tech sectors.

Strategic Oversight Parallels: Just as India underestimated Pakistan’s nuclear capability in the 1970s, ignoring the early-stage crypto pivot could similarly allow adversaries to reshape financial power balances.

India’s Regulatory and Strategic Crypto Vacuum:

Tax Without Law: India taxes crypto (30% + 1% TDS) but has no legal framework—flagged by the Supreme Court in May 2025.

User Boom, No Oversight: With 100+ million users (Triple-A), there’s no central regulator, exposing users to scams.

Cybersecurity Gaps: Lacking compliance norms, India faces major frauds—e.g., ₹900 crore GainBitcoin scam.

No Investor Safeguards: Unlike SEBI or RBI, crypto lacks grievance redressal or risk protection.

Slow CBDC Rollout: The RBI’s e₹ pilot lacks clear links to private crypto, limiting India’s digital currency leadership.

Way Ahead for India:

National Crypto Strategy: Develop a centralized strategy combining monetary, cybersecurity, and geopolitical objectives.

Regulatory Clarity: Establish a Digital Asset Regulatory Authority to streamline compliance, prevent misuse, and guide innovation.

Financial Intelligence Monitoring: Enhance FIU-IND tracking of crypto-linked transactions to identify risks and track terror financing.

Global Alignment: Coordinate with G20, FATF, and IMF for global crypto standards and cross-border data-sharing.

CBDC Push: Accelerate RBI’s e₹ project, giving India a sovereign edge in digital currency without undermining the banking system.

Awareness Campaigns: Educate youth and investors about legal status, risks, and financial literacy in crypto.

Conclusion:

India cannot afford to overlook the emerging crypto-geopolitical nexus involving Pakistan and the US. With over 100 million users, India must urgently develop a clear, forward-looking crypto strategy that ensures national security, financial integrity, and technological leadership.

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AI-assisted content, editorially reviewed by Kartavya Desk Staff.

About Kartavya Desk Staff

Articles in our archive published before our editorial team was expanded. Legacy content is periodically reviewed and updated by our current editors.

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