India has been positioned as a central player in the emerging architecture of global cryptocurrency regulation, according to participants at a Washington policy discussion held Wednesday under Chatham House Rules and first reported by news agency IANS.
The conversation centered on the United States’ push for global alignment on digital asset rules — a push that participants said cannot succeed without meaningful engagement from major economies like India. The framing is notable for Indian crypto industry observers because it reverses the direction of conversation that has dominated 2025 and early 2026: rather than India looking to Washington for regulatory cues, Washington is now looking to Delhi as a co-architect of the global framework.
Participants in the discussion said digital assets by their nature operate across borders, making international coordination essential to avoid regulatory fragmentation. The stated goal was to reduce compliance complexity, lower costs, and enable smoother capital movement in an increasingly digitized global economy.
Why India matters
Three factors were cited as making India structurally important to any future framework.
First, scale. India’s crypto user base is among the largest in the world despite the country’s tax regime, and its experience building national-scale public digital infrastructure — from UPI to Aadhaar — gives it technical credibility that few jurisdictions match.
Second, past influence. India’s role during its 2023 G20 presidency was central in pushing crypto regulation onto the multilateral agenda, producing the G20 roadmap that has since guided IMF-FSB coordination on digital asset policy. Participants at Wednesday’s discussion said India’s contribution there was “significant” and that future engagement could deepen as the technology matures.
Third, remittances. India is the world’s largest recipient of international remittance flows, estimated at over $125 billion annually. Digital assets could reduce friction and costs in cross-border payments — an area where US-India cooperation was identified as the most immediate practical opportunity.
The divergence problem
The discussion did not sidestep the significant gap between US and Indian regulatory postures.
Washington, particularly under the Trump administration’s current push, has embraced an innovation-driven framework. The CLARITY Act working its way through the Senate would formally divide oversight between the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) and Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) and create clear pathways for digital asset commerce. The GENIUS Act signed in July 2025 formalized stablecoin rules. The SEC and CFTC jointly issued interpretive guidance in March 2026, classifying major tokens as digital commodities.
India’s posture is substantively different. The Union Budget 2026-27 retained the 30% flat tax on virtual digital asset gains and the 1% Tax Deducted at Source on transfers—provisions Indian exchanges have consistently argued push trading activity offshore. New penalties for reporting lapses came into effect April 1, 2026. The Reserve Bank of India has maintained reservations about private digital currencies, prioritizing capital controls and monetary sovereignty over market-expansion goals.
Participants at Wednesday’s Washington discussion acknowledged these differences openly, attributing them to “varying economic structures and policy priorities.” But they also said convergence remains possible over time, particularly as India’s digital economy continues to scale.
What Indian industry should watch
For Indian crypto industry stakeholders, Wednesday’s discussion matters for three reasons.
First, it signals that US regulatory thinking now explicitly incorporates India as a co-designer rather than a follower. Industry voices who have spent years lobbying for tax relief may find more traction by framing domestic reform as a prerequisite for India’s role in global standard-setting.
Second, cross-border payments and remittances are emerging as the most productive near-term use case. Indian exchanges and fintech players positioned at the remittance-digital asset intersection—a space that has grown quietly despite the tax regime—may see accelerated regulatory attention if US-India bilateral cooperation materializes.
Third, the question of timing. Global frameworks, once set, are difficult to unwind. Participants at Wednesday’s discussion emphasized that “countries that move early to establish credible regulatory frameworks are more likely to shape international standards.” For India, the implication is clear: the longer Delhi takes to move beyond its current tax-first approach, the less influence it may have over rules being written now in Washington, Brussels, and Singapore.
The broader signal
Wednesday’s discussion was not an announcement, a deal, or a policy shift. It was a policy-level conversation operating under rules that explicitly prevent attribution. But the consistency of the India-focused framing across participant commentary suggests that Washington’s current thinking on global crypto coordination now assumes, rather than hopes for, meaningful Indian participation.
Whether Delhi chooses to engage at that level or continues to prioritize the cautious approach that has defined its digital asset policy since 2022 will shape not just India’s domestic crypto market but also its voice in the global framework that is now actively being constructed.
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