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India to Roll Out RBI-Linked Digital Currency Amid Dismissal of Crypto With 'No Backing'

On October 7, 2025 by voice

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India will introduce a digital currency backed by the Reserve Bank of India as part of a broader strategy to discourage private cryptocurrencies lacking sovereign or asset backing, Union Minister of Commerce and Industry Piyush Goyal announced on Monday.

The “RBI-guaranteed” digital currency aims to simplify transactions, reduce paper consumption, and enable faster, traceable payments compared to traditional banking systems, Goyal said during discussions in Doha on Monday, according to an ANI report. 

The minister clarified that while India hasn’t imposed an outright ban on crypto without central government backing, authorities are taxing them heavily to discourage use, “because we don’t want anybody to be stuck at some point with a cryptocurrency that has no backing and nobody at the backend.”

Goyal’s announcement comes as India, Pakistan, and Vietnam lead global crypto activity, according to Chainalysis’s 2025 Global Adoption Index, which shows the Asia-Pacific region recording a year-over-year growth in transaction volume from $1.4 trillion to $2.36 trillion.



Raj Kapoor, founder and CEO of the India Blockchain Alliance, told Decrypt that “Goyal’s explicit claim simply reiterates that the government continues to see a CBDC as a core plank of its fintech strategy.”

“The reference to ‘backed by RBI guarantee’ is substantial and not rhetorical as it seeks to contrast the state-issued digital currency as having superior legitimacy and security compared to ‘unbacked’ cryptos,” Kapoor said, calling out “speculative tokens, meme coins, or ephemeral DeFi constructs lacking anchoring assets.”

He said India is likely to adopt “a hybrid regulatory framework” combining monetary and securities oversight, requiring crypto issuers to hold “verifiable fiat or commodity reserves in regulated custody and undergo regular third-party audits.”

The minister’s remarks mark “a clear pivot toward stricter oversight,” Kapoor added, signaling India’s shift from a “tax-and-tolerate” approach to “a tiered compliance regime that favors regulated, asset-backed tokens over volatile, unbacked ones.”

“India’s plan for an RBI-backed digital rupee shows clear intent to merge trust with technology, similar to a state-guaranteed stablecoin,” Monica Jasuja, chief expansion and innovation officer at Emerging Payments Association Asia, told Decrypt.

“It signals confidence in regulated digital money over speculation, and for fintechs, the message is clear—build with the state, not outside it,” Jasuja added.

She said that if India backs an RBI-issued digital rupee over private stablecoins, investors may see it as “a safer but narrower play,” with “confidence shifting toward compliance-aligned ventures” and away from speculative, crypto-native projects.

The RBI has already piloted the digital rupee in both retail and wholesale segments, giving India a head start in CBDC implementation. 

However, industry observers have recently warned that regulatory uncertainty has created a bureaucratic stalemate, with an estimated 80-85% of India’s top crypto talent already relocated internationally, while the country struggles to establish clear frameworks for private cryptocurrencies.

The industry has also, for some time, viewed central bank digital currencies with a degree of skepticism, arguing that they move away from crypto’s core thesis by handing the monetary reins to a centralized authority operating on permissioned blockchains.

“A lot needs to be addressed,” Kapoor said, questioning how India intends to “calibrate privacy versus surveillance in a CBDC and in ‘approved’ token classes” to maintain user trust.

“Will the regulatory burden for token issuers be low enough to permit real competition, or will it favor incumbents?” he said. “How will India deal with foreign stablecoins or cross-border token flows that don’t meet its ‘asset-backed’ rules?”

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