India has dropped plans to pass any law to regulate crypto, choosing instead to keep watching the sector from a 0 to Reuters , a government document drafted this month says officials are afraid that regulating crypto would give it legitimacy, and that move could eventually make it a threat to the country’s financial 1 Reserve Bank of India, led by Governor Shaktikanta Das, made it clear that trying to control crypto through rules would be hard and 2 paper says flat out that making crypto legal would bring it into India’s mainstream financial space. That, they argue, could allow the market to grow too large and too fast. “It may cause the sector to become systemic,” the document 3 banning crypto entirely won’t stop peer-to-peer transfers or trading on decentralized platforms 4 instead of pushing new legislation, the government has decided to sit tight… for 5 delays policy decisions while banks freeze access India already tried to go after crypto 6 in 2021, the government put together a bill to ban private coins, but it never moved 7 the country’s G20 presidency in 2023, officials pushed for a global 8 in 2024, they promised a public paper to explain India’s position on the matter, but later delayed 9 new plan?
Wait and see what the 10 with crypto first. meanwhile, foreign crypto exchanges are still allowed to operate in 11 just need to register locally and go through due diligence checks to make sure money laundering laws are 12 taxes are 13 government imposes high penalties on any profits from 14 tax policies, plus the lack of legal clarity, have nearly shut down trading between traditional banks and crypto 15 Reserve Bank keeps warning the public about the dangers. That’s led to a near-total freeze on any kind of formal financial link between the crypto industry and the regular banking system. Still, Indians have poured over $4.5 billion into crypto 16 for now, officials don’t think that kind of exposure is big enough to shake up the 17 raise new concerns as 18 rules The document reportedly says current tax rules and limited legal clarity are actually 19 make speculative trading less attractive and help prevent 20 also adds that with different countries doing different things, coming up with one clear policy isn’t going to be 21 Donald Trump signed the GENIUS Act into law on July 22 law allows stablecoins to be used more widely.
India’s government says this shift could affect both advanced and developing 23 stablecoins are pegged to the 24 paper warns that this could disrupt other countries’ payment 25 also points out that even so-called “stable” coins can swing in value when markets are hit with liquidity 26 officials are worried that the spread of stablecoins might mess with national systems like UPI, which handles instant digital payments between Indian banks. “Widespread use of stablecoins could fragment national payment systems,” the document 27 Difference Wire : the secret tool crypto projects use to get guaranteed media coverage
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