DC Wallet Partners with Indian Government-Owned Firm to Promote Digital Rupee Adoption
DC Wallet's partnership with AFC India aims to expand digital rupee adoption across unbanked populations and key sectors, following the RBI's XRP test.
DC Wallet just announced a partnership with AFC India Limited, a company owned by the Indian government, to promote the adoption of the digital rupee.
This adoption initiative comes after the Reserve Bank of India tested this CBDC on Ripple’s XRP ledger in November.
Digital Rupee Adoption Strategies
DC Wallet announced this partnership via a press release detailing the companies’ strategies and goals. Although India’s Central Bank Digital Currency (CBDC), the digital rupee, was launched over two years ago, it has yet to achieve widespread adoption. This new public-private partnership focused on several possible growth areas.
“The strategy spans to provide closed loop wallet solutions to sectors such as agriculture, education, and travel, with a potential reach of over 200 million users. AFC will help integrate DC Wallet with public and private sector banks… for India’s unbanked and underbanked population. The solution also offers cost-effective cross-border payments,” the release stated.
DC Wallet and AFC undertook this project after the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) performed a test in late November. Specifically, the RBI ran the digital rupee on Ripple’s XRP ledger “for institutional use cases.”
This experiment verified the CBDC’s security and efficiency, proving it could handle widespread usage. The next challenge, then, is converting widespread users.
This partnership makes sense for several reasons. For one, it resembles a similar development in Brazil, where the Central Bank partnered with crypto firms to facilitate a new CBDC. This October, Indian financial regulators strongly advocated for the digital rupee over crypto assets like Bitcoin and Ethereum.
India’s financial regulators have had a quarrelsome relationship with some elements of the traditional crypto industry. For example, the prominent exchange Binance only returned to the Indian market in August after being ejected for noncompliance issues. Nonetheless, the firm is still butting heads with the authorities, who accused it of owing $85 million in taxes yesterday.
In other words, it’s quite understandable that government-backed institutions would support this initiative. DC Wallet’s press release did not mention any specific investment amounts, but the partnership set ambitious goals for itself. Winning widespread digital rupee adoption in these unbanked and underbanked populations could prove a formidable challenge.
Disclaimer: The content of this article solely reflects the author's opinion and does not represent the platform in any capacity. This article is not intended to serve as a reference for making investment decisions.
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