Relevance: GS Paper III – Indian Economy (Monetary System, Financial Technology, Cryptocurrency); Source: The Indian Express, RBI Reports
Context & News
The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) is expanding its pilot project for the Digital Rupee (e₹) — India’s official Central Bank Digital Currency (CBDC). This comes amid rapid growth of digital payments and debate over the role of cryptocurrencies and private virtual assets in the global economy.
The initiative aims to modernize India’s payment infrastructure while maintaining monetary stability and regulatory oversight.
What is a Central Bank Digital Currency (CBDC)?
A CBDC is a digital form of sovereign currency issued by a nation’s central bank. It is legal tender, equivalent to physical currency, and represents a direct liability of the RBI — unlike cryptocurrencies, which are privately created and unregulated.
RBI Rules and Pilot Details
- Launch: December 2022 (Retail e₹-R); November 2022 (Wholesale e₹-W).
- Usage: Person-to-Person (P2P) and Person-to-Merchant (P2M) transactions via mobile wallets.
- Legal Status: Same as cash — 1 e₹ = ₹1.
- Objective: Reduce dependence on cash, lower transaction costs, and promote financial inclusion.
Types of Currency in India
|
Type |
Issuer / Authority | Key Features |
Current Status |
| Physical Currency | RBI (notes) / Govt. of India (coins) | Tangible, universally accepted | Legal tender |
| Bank Deposits / Digital Payments | Commercial Banks | Money in accounts, transferable digitally | Widely used |
| CBDC (Digital Rupee) | RBI | Sovereign, centralized digital form of currency | Pilot under implementation |
| Cryptocurrency (e.g., Bitcoin, Ethereum) | Private / Decentralized | Based on blockchain; not issued by any central authority | Not legal tender in India (regulated under FEMA & PMLA) |
CBDC vs Cryptocurrency
|
Aspect |
CBDC (e₹) |
Cryptocurrency |
| Issuer | Central Bank (RBI) | Private / Decentralized network |
| Legal Tender | Yes | No |
| Stability | Backed by sovereign guarantee | Highly volatile |
| Regulation | Fully regulated by RBI | Under scrutiny; subject to KYC/PMLA norms |
| Technology | Permissioned digital ledger | Public blockchain (decentralized) |
Adoption & Way Forward
|
Challenges |
Way Forward |
| Limited public awareness and wallet adoption | Integrate with existing payment apps and UPI |
| Privacy and cybersecurity concerns | Develop robust data protection and encryption standards |
| Risk of exclusion in low-connectivity areas | Enable offline CBDC transactions |
| Global interoperability | Align with G20 Digital Public Infrastructure standards |
The Digital Rupee aligns with India’s Digital Economy Vision and supports SDG 9 (Industry, Innovation, Infrastructure) and SDG 8 (Decent Work and Economic Growth).
UPSC Prelims Practice Question:
With reference to India’s digital currency framework, consider the following statements:
- The Digital Rupee (e₹) is a liability of the RBI and has legal tender status.
- Cryptocurrencies such as Bitcoin are recognized as legal tender in India.
- Both CBDC and cryptocurrencies operate on decentralized blockchain networks.
Which of the above statements are correct?
(a) 1 only (b) 1 and 2 only
(c) 1 and 3 only (d) All of the above
Answer: (a) 1 only
One-line Wrap: India’s Digital Rupee marks a major leap toward a sovereign, regulated digital payment future, distinguishing itself from the volatile and unregulated world of cryptocurrencies.
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