“Blockchain in India got off on wrong foot”

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Share on line Blockchain in India got off on wrong foot, says former finance chief India’s government doesn’t like cryptocurrencies and has made that clear in statements and with heavy taxes on the asset class, but what does that say about blockchain adoption? Subhash Chandra Garg, India’s former finance secretary.(Image credit: Screengrab from interview) Subhash…

Share on line Blockchain in India got off on wrong foot, says former finance chief India’s government doesn’t like cryptocurrencies and has made that clear in statements and with heavy taxes on the asset class, but what does that say about blockchain adoption? Subhash Chandra Garg, India’s former finance secretary.(Image credit: Screengrab from interview)

Subhash Chandra Garg, India’s former finance secretary, said blockchain’s potential will be recognized and adopted in India, but it has so far been overshadowed by the government’s opposition to the use of cryptocurrencies associated with the new technology.

“Blockchain was always seen as something innovative, but it is so deeply masked with the asset or the (crypto) currency side of it that it has been difficult so far to separate the technological innovation,” Garg told Forkast in an exclusive interview.

Garg, who served as India’s finance secretary in 2019 from March 1 to July 25, said blockchain technology is superior to traditional database technologies in organizing assets and many other types of services.

“My sense is that this is the future,” he said, “And lots of businesses, assets, and even personal interactions would shift to this.This, perhaps, is going to be the biggest and the best innovation which has been done for turning the human society into a digital society,” Garg said.

Enemy at the gate s

However, blockchain technology arrived in India associated with Bitcoin as a “currency substitute” for a sovereign or fiat currency, threatening the control of the government and the central bank, said Garg.

“And therefore, the whole system prepared for stopping the enemy in their tracks,” Garg said, and this left the benefits and services that blockchains can generate in the background, he added.

The Reserve Bank of India, the country’s central bank, has said it seeks a complete ban on cryptocurrencies, while India’s finance minister Nirmala Sitharaman introduced a flat 30% tax on all crypto income.

If this wasn’t enough, India then imposed a 1% tax deducted at source on all crypto transactions above 10,000 Indian rupees (US$126), with no provision to offset losses made in one cryptocurrency with gains in another.

“The effect of this taxation has increased the compliance burden on the exchanges substantially,” Garg said.

The restrictions in India and the global drop in cryptocurrencies in the last couple of months have seen crypto transactions decline in the country, Garg said.

But, “I see this (blockchain) is unstoppable.This will change the world.India has unfortunately taken a more muddled and difficult kind of position, which will hurt its (blockchain’s) arrival, its mainstreaming.But it will arrive in time.”

Garg said technology adoption is driven more by its fundamental value, not government permission, and blockchain and cryptography technology will do well in India as its citizens are well wired to deal with information technology.

Long live crypto?

Garg, however, said sovereign currencies will remain because currencies need value stability.

This can be achieved by controling the supply of the currency as well as interest rates, among other measures.

In contrast, Garg said, no one in the private sector has the ability to control the value of cryptocurrencies and manage them in a macroeconomic setting to take care of the economy, inflation or deficits, recessions, growth, and similar concerns.

“Cryptocurrencies as a general purpose currency outside their platforms is not a good option,” he said, “Cryptocurrencies as a general currency will not survive, they will not work.” Author profile Pradipta Mukherjee Pradipta Mukherjee is a business reporter and has worked for Bloomberg News and Business Standard in India.An MBA and a post-graduate in Economics, Mukherjee focuses on financial markets and corporates.She is a Mary Morgan Hewitt award recipient for Women in Journalism.She has also won the Jefferson Fellowship; the Thomson Reuters Foundation fellowship on ‘Social Media and Digital Journalism’ at The Chinese University of Hong Kong; and most recently, the Kiplinger Fellowship at Ohio University, USA.subscribe to our newsletter Get the best of Forkast delivered to your inbox daily Name .

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