Cryptocurrencies could be acceptable in India as a shop of worth but they are not best for transactions as the nation has a great deal superior options, Infosys non-executive chairman Nandan Nilekani stated at the FE CFO Awards 2020 on Tuesday.
While the US and Chinese digital economies have been centred about information monopolies, India’s digital infrastructure has laid the railroads for democratisation of services, he stated.
“My view is: Don’t think of crypto as a transactional currency because it will never be able to meet the transactional efficiency of UPI (Unified Payments Interface) in India anyway. UPI does 2.3 billion transactions a month and the architecture built by NPCI (National payments Corporation of India) is for 1 billion transactions a day at almost zero cost. So bitcoin can never compete on transactional efficiency,” Nilekani stated. Rather, we have to have to assume of bitcoin as a shop of worth.
“Think of it like an asset class, like gold and real estate. You can put some rules around it,” he stated.
Nilekani added: “So we should have a model of crypto as an asset class which I can hold; I may have to declare it, I may have to pay taxes on it, all that is required. But bring that within the system.”
The launch of a digital rupee will have to also be deemed, he observed. The Indian government and the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) can undoubtedly look at a digital rupee and it can use the distribution architecture of UPI to attain 200 billion men and women. “No other country can do that. The UPI architecture allows multiple stored-value accounts,” he stated. This implies that on UPI one can have a bank account, a wallet, a bitcoin account or an account from digital rupee.
It is unfair to evaluate the Indian digital ecosystem to that in the US for the reason that the two economies have followed really unique trajectories in this space, Nilekani stated. While the US has enabled the develop-up of significant Internet conglomerates and search engines on the back of marketing-driven models, India has invested public funds to set up public infrastructure. “What happened in the US is that once the government set up the Internet, after 1995 the Internet became a private space.
They did not invest in improving the Internet from an architecture point of view after 2000, whereas in India in the last 10 years, Aadhaar, UPI and the account aggregators have been extensions to the Internet that only India has done.”
Being capable to get economic merchandise via the video KYC route or subscribing to an IPO via UPI are examples of how the laying down of digital railroads in India has helped subscription-based services to develop and helped democratise the economic services market, he stated.
“All this stuff (digital infrastructure) will actually make it easier for the small guys to get access to credit. Through e-commerce, small businesses get access to markets. Like that, if we can get more and more companies on this digital highway, they will see growth coming.”