Modernisation of Financial Architecture: How India is adopting stablecoins

India embraces stablecoins as part of modernising its financial architecture.
Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman has indicated that India must be ready to engage with crypto-assets such as stablecoins, marking a policy shift from caution to strategic integration in the digital-asset economy.

What are Stablecoins?
  • Stablecoins are blockchain-based digital assets pegged to a stable reference such as a currency (USD, INR), commodity (gold), or basket of assets.
  • They aim to maintain a consistent value over time, unlike volatile cryptocurrencies such as Bitcoin.
  • Typically backed by reserves held by banks or custodians, making them less speculative and more suited to payments.
Types of Stablecoins
  1. Fiat-backed: e.g. USDT, USDC — pegged to fiat currency reserves.
  2. Crypto-backed: e.g. DAI — backed by other crypto collateral.
  3. Algorithmic: value stabilised through code-based supply adjustments (though riskier, as seen in the TerraUSD collapse).
India’s Approach — From Caution to Engagement
  • Earlier, India’s regulatory stance was guarded, stressing risk management and macroeconomic stability.
  • The 2025 policy rethink acknowledges that stablecoins can serve as payment infrastructure, cross-border remittance rails, and tools for financial inclusion.
  • The shift aligns with global frameworks like:
    • EU’s MiCA Regulation (Markets in Crypto-Assets) — defining reserve and disclosure norms.
    • US GENIUS Act — shaping regulatory frameworks for digital assets.
Financial Architecture & New Plumbing
  • In the traditional banking world, cross-border transfers are slow and fragmented.
  • Stablecoins backed by blockchain rails can make such transactions instantaneous and low-cost.
  • Projects like Visa’s 2025 stablecoin integration with Solana and Ethereum show how global institutions now treat stablecoins as serious financial instruments.
  • Stablecoins act like the HTTP of finance — enabling seamless “plug-and-play” transfer of value.
Global and Domestic Momentum
  • Institutional adoption is growing:
    • Banks like J.P. Morgan and Citigroup use tokenised deposits.
    • Visa and Mastercard test blockchain settlement layers.
  • India’s UPI provides a natural foundation for integrating stablecoin rails, enhancing real-time cross-border interoperability.
  • A regulatory sandbox could balance innovation with consumer protection and macro-prudential oversight.
Challenges & Policy Considerations
  • Volatility risk (especially in algorithmic models).
  • Reserve transparency and auditability.
  • AML/KYC enforcement on decentralised platforms.
  • Monetary sovereignty concerns — potential impact on RBI’s control over money supply and CBDC rollout.
  • Need for interoperability between stablecoins, CBDCs, and traditional banking systems.
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