HomeNewsOpinionOPINION | India’s Crypto Dilemma: Why half-regulation is worse than a ban

OPINION | India’s Crypto Dilemma: Why half-regulation is worse than a ban

We tax it, advertise it, and let exchanges run, but still pretend crypto isn’t 'official.’ Half-regulation is like giving teenagers sharp knives and hoping they don’t cut themselves

September 12, 2025 / 10:12 IST
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Crypto
The world’s top financial watchdogs are not exactly cheering crypto on.

Policymaking around emerging technologies is more like parenting teenagers. You can’t quite control them but pretending you can usually make the rebellion worse but also makes you feel good about yourself. India’s latest crypto stance being the latest such example.

Take online gaming. At first, the government flirted with responsible regulation, self-regulation and such models. Then came the headlines: bankrupt families, addiction-driven suicides, and parents watching savings vanish on fantasy games and betting sports. A hard stop came after and everything real money game was banned. But only after they were highly visible across all sporting sponsorships including Indian Premier League, no less. No shades of grey, no half-measures. A blunt instrument, but at least it drew a line.

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India has been here before with other technologies too. Social media grew unchecked for a decade before we even began to talk about guardrails on data misuse and misinformation. Lending apps mushroomed until the regulator had to suddenly step in after thousands were trapped in predatory debt. AI is now racing ahead faster than rules on privacy or consent can keep up. The pattern is familiar: innovation sprints, regulation crawls, and consumers are left unprotected until the damage is already done. Crypto is simply the latest chapter.

India's Crypto Policy Needs Clarity