Indian Cryptocurrency Regulation Is Ready, Official ConfirmsAhead of the G20 summit, India’s new finance secretary has confirmed that the report detailing the country’s crypto regulation is now ready. It will soon be submitted to the finance minister for approval. Since Arun Jaitley opted out of cabinet responsibilities, Prime Minister Narendra Modi has appointed a new finance minister. Also read: Indian Supreme […]

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Indian Cryptocurrency Regulation Is Ready, Official Confirms

Ahead of the G20 summit, India’s new finance secretary has confirmed that the report detailing the country’s crypto regulation is now ready. It will soon be submitted to the finance minister for approval. Since Arun Jaitley opted out of cabinet responsibilities, Prime Minister Narendra Modi has appointed a new finance minister.

Also read: Indian Supreme Court Postpones Crypto Case at Government’s Request

India’s Crypto Regulation Is ‘Ready’

After more than one year of analysis and deliberation, the report containing the recommended regulatory framework for cryptocurrency in India is now ready to be submitted to the finance minister, according to local media. The new finance secretary, former Secretary of the Department of Economic Affairs (DEA) Subhash Chandra Garg, reportedly confirmed its readiness at an event hosted by the Associated Chambers of Commerce and Industry of India on Thursday.

“On the cryptocurrency regulation, Garg said the report is ready,” PTI reported, further quoting the finance secretary as saying:

We will submit it to the finance minister (soon). Of course, once the approval is done, it will be made public.

Indian Cryptocurrency Regulation Is Ready, Official Confirms
Subhash Chandra Garg

Garg heads an interministerial committee instituted to study all aspects of cryptocurrency and draft the country’s crypto regulation. Included on the committee are representatives from the Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology, the Reserve Bank of India (RBI), the Securities and Exchange Board of India, and the Central Board of Direct Taxes.

This draft regulation was supposed to be ready in July last year. “We are fairly close to developing a kind of template which we think might be in the best interest of our country. We have prepared a draft which we intend to discuss with the committee members in the first week of July [2018],” Garg explained in an interview at the time. However, no crypto regulation has been announced and the Ministry of Finance told Lok Sabha in December last year that “the department is pursuing the matter with due caution,” noting that “It is difficult to state a specific timeline to come up with clear recommendations.” The government subsequently shared with the supreme court in February that the report containing the recommendations for India’s crypto regulation is in the final stages of deliberation.

RTI Request Rejected

Another indication that the committee’s crypto report has either been finalized or is being finalized is the government’s reply to a Right to Information (RTI) request filed by the founder of local news outlet Coin Crunch India. Naimish Sanghvi asked the DEA about the reported “Banning of Cryptocurrencies and Regulation of Official Digital Currencies Bill 2019.”

Last month, the Economic Times wrote that this bill had been circulated to relevant government departments for discussion, citing an unnamed government official claiming to know the details of the bill. The news outlet noted at the time that, based on the feedback, “A final law will be proposed to the next government that takes charge after elections at the end of May.”

Indian Cryptocurrency Regulation Is Ready, Official Confirms

“The RTI was filed on April 26, one day after the reports surfaced. On May 20, 2019 DEA rejected the RTI application citing ‘Section 8(1)(i)’ as the reason for rejection,” Coin Crunch India shared. “This could mean that DEA simply rejected it because eventually the information has to be made public.”

Section 8(1)(i) of The Right to Information Act 2005 states that “the decisions of Council of Ministers, the reasons thereof, and the material on the basis of which the decisions were taken shall be made public after the decision has been taken, and the matter is complete, or over … those matters which come under the exemptions specified in this section shall not be disclosed.”

Jaitley Out, Modi Appoints New Finance Minister

Garg said that his committee’s report will soon be submitted to the finance minister, the position held by Arun Jaitley since 2014. However, Jaitley is suffering from poor health and has opted out of cabinet responsibilities. On May 29, he posted on Twitter a letter addressed to Modi which reads:

I am writing to you to formally request you that I should be allowed a reasonable time for myself, my treatment and my health and, therefore, not be a part of any responsibility, for the present, in the new government.

Indian Cryptocurrency Regulation Is Ready, Official Confirms
Arun Jaitley

The letter continues, “I would obviously have a lot of time at my disposal to undertake any work informally to support the government or the party.”

Jaitley’s famous budget speech on cryptocurrency in February last year has been cited far and wide when he said that “The government does not recognise cryptocurrency as legal tender or coin,” Quartz India quoted him as saying. However, some people mistook his speech as meaning that cryptocurrency was illegal. The CEO of local crypto exchange Unocoin, Sathvik Vishwanath, clarified to news.Bitcoin.com: “The finance minister was clear: cryptocurrencies are not legal tender in India. He did not say that they are not legal in India. There’s a huge difference.”

On Friday, Modi appointed Nirmala Sitharaman, who served as the country’s Minister of Defence until May 30, as the new finance and corporate affairs minister. She is India’s first full-time female finance minister.

Crypto Community’s Campaign

The Indian crypto community had been campaigning to Jaitley and other lawmakers for positive regulation and the end to the banking restriction. The RBI issued a circular in April last year, prohibiting regulated financial institutions from providing services to crypto businesses. Banks subsequently closed accounts of crypto exchanges.

Indian Cryptocurrency Regulation Is Ready, Official Confirms

Nischal Shetty, CEO of local crypto exchange Wazirx, started a social media campaign for positive crypto regulation 213 days ago. While wishing Jaitley a speedy recovery, he emphasized that his “India Wants Crypto” campaign “will continue and we’ll ensure that India is at the forefront of the crypto revolution.” Noting that “Positive crypto regulations in India will help create wealth and jobs for millions of Indians” and “Millions of youth in India want to see positive crypto moves by the government,” he urged the new finance minister to introduce positive crypto regulation.

The community now awaits a formal announcement from the government as well as the supreme court hearing on July 23. The court is expected to address two crypto-related issues: the regulatory framework recommended by the Garg committee and the banking restriction by the central bank.

Do you think the Indian government will introduce crypto-friendly regulation? Let us know in the comments section below.


Images courtesy of Shutterstock, India TV, and The Economic Times.


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