New Delhi (TIP)- RBI Governor Shaktikanta Das on Thursday, June 30, said cryptocurrencies are a clear danger to the financial systems and asked the people to be cautious about the emerging risks in this regard. “While technology has supported the reach of the financial sector and its benefits must be fully harnessed, its potential to disrupt financial stability has to be guarded against,” Das wrote in the foreword of the RBI’s annual ‘Financial Stability Report’(FSR) 2022.
His observations came on a day when the global Financial Action Task Force (FATF) in its report on implementation of Standards on virtual assets (VAs) said many countries need to strengthen understanding of money laundering and terrorist financing risks in this regard. “Jurisdictions have made only limited progress over the last year in implementing this requirement. Of the 98 jurisdictions that responded to FATF’s March 2022 survey, only 29 jurisdictions have passed relevant Travel Rule laws, and a small subset of these jurisdictions have started enforcement,” said the FATF report.
The RBI chief had earlier said investors who invest in cryptocurrencies should keep in mind that they are investing at their own risk and “also need to keep in mind that the cryptocurrency has no underlying value, not even a tulip”. “Overall, the financial stability risks to the Indian economy are skewed towards global spillovers and geopolitical tensions. Nevertheless, the Indian financial system exhibits underlying robustness and resilience to withstand these shocks,” he said.
India raises import tax on gold
India has raised its basic import duty on gold from 7.5 per cent to 12.5 per cent, the government said in a notification on Friday, as the world’s second biggest consumer of the precious metal tries to dampen its demand. India fufills most of its gold demand through imports, which were putting pressure on the rupee which hit a record low earlier this week.