Supreme Court of India Issues Notice to Reserve Bank Seeking Regulation of Bitcoin
The
Supreme Court of India issued a notice on 13 November 2017 to the nation’s
central bank and related financial ministries to hasten their regulatory
mechanisms with regard to bitcoin. Concerns about cryptocurrency’s lack of
central control and potential use for money laundering have sounded alarms
throughout the country’s bureaucracies.
“Lack
of any concrete mechanism pending the regulatory framework,” a newly released
petition to the Supreme Court of India asserts, “has left a lot of vacuum and
which has resulted in total unaccountability and unregulated Bitcoin (crypto
money) trading and transactions,” advocate DwaipayanBhowmick urged. He’s
asking the country’s financial regulatory bodies be compelled to “control the
flow of Bitcoin by forming a committee to frame an appropriate mechanism to
regulate the same.”
The
petition was granted, and was issued by Justices AM
Khanwilkar and DY Chandrachud along with Chief Justice Dipak Misra.
Government fear of bitcoin is palpable, and the petition
speaks to how an “emerging trend of crypto money if unchecked and unregulated
is threat to exchequers money and financial sovereignty of the country,”
emphasis added. Exchequers are holdovers from British colonial rule, and
essentially act as a sole spending authority – a kind of central government
fund made from taxation.
The 43 page petition carefully threads the argumentative
needle of at once claiming bitcoin to not be a currency while, since it is used
in transactions, to still fall under financial regulation regimes.
The
petition comes at the end of a tough month for Bitcoiners in India. More
official statements about cryptocurrency ills continue to be spread by
government officials at the highest levels, and its tabloid press is full of
stories conflating bitcoin with crime.
According
to The Economic Times, the Supreme Court responded
to the petition in the affirmative, and has “issued notice to the ministries of
Finance, Law and Justice, Information Technology, market regulator SEBI and the
RBI, on the plea which also sought setting up of a panel to frame a mechanism
to regulate the flow of Bitcoin.”
That
phrase, “the flow of bitcoin” appears in several sources. Just how that is to
be accomplished and what it means is something of a mystery, and perhaps
reveals a fundamental problem: regulators might not understand bitcoin.
After
asserting falsely bitcoin to be completely untraceable, the petition cites how “certain countries
have made Bitcoin (crypto money) subject to their respective tax regimes, while
a few other countries have designated it as a commodity, thereby making Bitcoin
subject to government regulation and accountable to the exchequer, but no such
mechanism exists in India.”
Source:https://bitcoin.com/supreme-court-of-india-issues-notice-to-reserve-bank-seeking-regulation-of-bitcoin/
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