April 20, 2022
2 mins read

Sitharaman raises fears over cryptocurrency

The Finance Minister is in Washington DC for the Spring Meetings of the World Bank group…reports Yashwant Raj

Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman on Tuesday raised doubts about the size of the cryptocurrency market worldwide and stressed the need for a regulatory mechanism acceptable to all countries to prevent its use to launder money and fund terrorism, which, she said, were big concerns for India.

“I think the biggest risk for all countries across the board will be on the money laundering aspect and also on the aspect of currency being used for financing terror,” Sitharaman said at a seminar hosted by the International Monetary Fund (IMF).

The Finance Minister is in Washington DC for the Spring Meetings of the World Bank group.

The minister pitched the need for a common international approach on regulating the sector, in addition to all the changes that have taken place in the last few years. “Unless there’s going to be a global approach at regulating and also an understanding of the technology even as it keeps evolving, to be on the top of things, and to have technology driven solutions to regulate and monitor. Not so much to interfere, but, of course to keep an eye on “money laundering.”

The minister had earlier at the seminar raised doubts about the size of the cryptocurrency market. “We are not sure about the veracity of the data, which says the volume is this much or that much. Those numbers are questionable.”

India distinguishes between cryptocurrency and crypto assets as a result, and the minister had in February announced a 30 per cent tax on income from these transactions, which includes a 1 per cent deduction at source. “We were trying to make sure that we are keeping a trail and also making sure these are going to be eventually compliant with anti-money laundering rules. Additionally, we are making sure that these kind of operations don’t end up inadvertently to funding any kind of terror activities.”

Sitharaman had used the seminar to detail India’s growing e-economy and plans on entering the cryptocurrency market with its own currency sometime during the year.

ALSO READ: India backs Lanka, bats for IMF bailout

Previous Story

Musk willing to boost Twitter investment

Next Story

Why can’t India have more official languages?

Latest from -Top News

Pentagon Labels China Top Threat

Hegseth told a House defence panel that Beijing is preparing for war in the Indo-Pacific to assert regional and global dominance. US Secretary of Defence Pete Hegseth stated on Tuesday that China

NTSB to probe Air India crash

The National Transportation Safety Board stated that as per protocols, all information on the investigation will be provided by India National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB), an independent US government agency tasked with

‘I don’t know how I’m alive’

Vishwash Kumar Ramesh is believed to be the sole survivor of the Air India Flight 171 crash. His brother said he video called their father moments after the crash to say: “I

DEADLY TAKEOFF: 241 Gone, One Lives!

The flight had 242 on board. Only one—an Indian-origin Briton in seat 11A—survived and is being treated in hospital. An Air India Boeing 787-8 Dreamliner carrying 242 people crashed shortly after takeoff
Go toTop

Don't Miss

India to import more oil from Russia

Russian Ambassador Denis Alipov says West’s criticism of India on

India rejects allegations of meddling in Canadian polls

Jaiswal further emphasised that India continues to call on Canada