Moneycontrol
HomeNewsBusinessIndia’s payments are already fast, so why import stablecoins? RBI deputy governor makes the case against them

India’s payments are already fast, so why import stablecoins? RBI deputy governor makes the case against them

Delivering the keynote address at a media conclave, Sankar said stablecoins lack the core attributes of modern money, fiat backing and singleness, and therefore are structurally unsuitable to anchor a financial system.

December 12, 2025 / 21:04 IST
Story continues below Advertisement
CBDCs, he argued, combine the advantages of digital tokens with sovereign backing, monetary stability and regulatory oversight, while avoiding the risks posed by private digital currencies.

The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) Deputy Governor T Rabi Sankar on Friday raised concerns over the growing prominence of stablecoins, arguing that they pose significant risks to monetary sovereignty, financial stability and banking systems, while offering few benefits that cannot already be delivered by existing payment infrastructure.

Delivering the keynote address at a media conclave, Sankar said stablecoins lack the core attributes of modern money, fiat backing and singleness, and therefore are structurally unsuitable to anchor a financial system.

Story continues below Advertisement

"Over time, the form of money has evolved with technology - from commodities to metal to paper to balances in deposit accounts to now, digital tokens. While the forms of money have evolved with technology, the fundamental character of money - what it represents, or what gives it credibility - has always been that it represents value that has users' trust," he said.

The RBI DG noted that money derives credibility from sovereign backing and trust, whereas unbacked cryptocurrencies have no intrinsic value or promise to pay, making them speculative instruments rather than money or even financial assets.