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Is a ban even possible on private cryptocurrencies?

According to industry estimates, two crore Indians have invested in cryptocurrencies with their holdings totalling up to $4-5 billion.

November 25, 2021 / 14:45 IST
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Ban on private cryptocurrency has been the top news this week as ‘Cryptocurrency and Regulation of Official Digital Currency Bill, 2021’ is set to be tabled in Parliament’s Winter Session which will begin on November 29.

But, while the noise has mostly been around clarity of private cryptocurrency and other concerns about crypto being an asset or a currency, one more fundamental question that arises at this juncture is: can the Government of India actually put a blanket ban on private cryptocurrencies?

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For the unversed, cryptocurrencies are based on distributed ledgers, that is they use blockchain technology to have multiple ledgers, which are connected over the network. Any transaction on the network is recorded and cross-checked across all these ledgers, which acts as a check. If one ledger’s data does not match the other, it gets cancelled. This removes the need for third-party monitoring of the network or its ledgers. Hence, there is no central institution monitoring the transactions. The network of computers connected to the blockchain does it on its own. This is also the reason why the origin of cryptocurrencies is said to be 'Decentralised Finance' or 'DeFi' which means it is decentralised. As it is decentralised, it is also transparent.

Now, comes the private vs public.