Sandeep Nailwal, the co-founder of Polygon blockchain has said that India should establish one regulatory body dedicate to monitor and shape up the crypto industry in the nation. The programming engineer, who now resides in Dubai, said that representatives from the Reserve Bank of India (RBI), GST Council, and the federal finance ministry should be part of a newly form body dedicate to monitoring and framing the crypto ecosystem in India.
At present India is witnessing a boom in the blockchain industry, which provides the underlaying support to back cryptocurrencies and other relate Web3 sectors like the metaverse and non-fungible tokens (NFTs).
Sandeep Nailwal has said that a new task force, head by the finance ministry in India could provide industry players and insiders all the clarity they need on engaging with the crypto industry.
Sandeep Nailwal Said :
A single regulatory body will also provide a platform for blockchain players to discuss future plans with India’s financial and national security advocates to take actions in accordance with the government laws, Sandeep Nailwal believes.
Sandeep Nailwal Said :
Sandeep Nailwal said that India’s lack of regularity and clarity around the crypto sector is leading to a “crazy brain drain” from the Indian crypto sector.
Regulatory uncertainties in India were one of the major factors why Polygon, despite being create by Indian developers, has no offices in the country.
While India is still awaiting its core crypto laws, the country has brought the digital assets industry under its tax regime starting April 1.
Government of India has levied 30% tax on all profits or incomes generate by the trading, buying or selling of virtual digital assets.
A 1% tax-deducted-at-source (TDS) has also impose on all crypto transactions in order to keep their movements under traceable category.
Sandeep Nailwal suggest, other groups focussing on core crypto developments, are cropping up on global levels.
UK has form a special Crypto and Digital Assets Group, bringing together parliamentarians, law makers, and finance experts to foster its crypto ecosystem.
The Financial Stability Board, which groups regulators, central banks, and finance ministry officials from the G20 economies, is also looking at what needs to be done with cryptocurrency assets.
The Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) has lso draft rules instructing global tax institutions on how to share crypto-related data among each other to maintain regulatory clarity on an international scale.