The Indian government revealed it has no immediate plans to regulate the sales and purchase of cryptocurrencies as it continues to tighten oversight on crypto-related money laundering and terrorism financing.
During a parliamentary meeting on Aug. 5, Pankaj Chaudhary, minister of state in India’s Ministry of Finance, responded to several questions detailing the nation’s current stance on crypto regulations.
Chaudhary said that India has not conducted any study or research to understand the adoption level of cryptocurrencies among its citizens. He responded by saying:
“Crypto assets or Virtual Digital Assets (VDAs) are unregulated in India and the government does not collect data on these assets.”
India will tax crypto, not regulate it
Although India officially implemented a tax system for cryptocurrency transfers and profits on April 1, 2022, the government has no plans to regulate the sale and purchase of cryptocurrencies. Under India’s crypto law, citizens are required to pay a 30% tax on unrealized crypto gains and a 1% tax deducted at source (TDS).
Chaudhary highlighted India’s ongoing efforts toward Anti-Money Laundering (AML) and Countering the Financing of Terrorism (CFT) in crypto. Earlier in January, India banned several offshore crypto exchanges due to noncompliance with local regulations, including Binance, KuCoin, Bitget, Huobi, OKX, Gate.io and MEXC.
However, the nation has no plans to regulate crypto purchases and sales. Chaudhary added:
“Currently, there is no proposal to bring legislation for regulating the sales and purchase of virtual digital assets in the country.”
Ongoing efforts to curb illicit crypto activities
He also reminded that India had pushed for a coordinated effort from all G20 nations to curb the illicit use of cryptocurrencies globally during its 2023 presidency.
Related: CoinDCX introduces protection fund to secure Indian crypto users
Binance’s plan to reenter India after paying a $2-million fine for noncompliance was recently met with a roadblock.
On Aug. 6, the Directorate General of Goods and Service Tax Intelligence (DGGI) — an Indian law enforcement agency — demanded 722 crore Indian rupees ($86 million) in unpaid taxes from Binance.
Indian authorities had sent email notices to Binance offices in Seychelles, the Cayman Islands and Switzerland, which the crypto exchange ignored. However, Binance later appointed a local counsel to officially resolve its tax obligations.
Magazine: How crypto bots are ruining crypto — including auto memecoin rug pulls