Try GOLD - Free
The money revolution won't be televised: It may not even occur
Mint Chennai
|October 06, 2025
It's too much of a public good and national-security concern to be left to private actors. It will stay within the state's purview
What does the future hold for money and payment systems? While it will surely feature unprecedented technologies, foreseeing the full picture requires historical context.
Traditionally, money and payment systems have run on a combination of base money (issued by a central bank) and private-sector money, typically issued by commercial banks through demand deposits, credit cards and so forth. Since newer fin-tech payment systems such as Alipay, WeChat or PayPal are still linked to bank deposits and credit cards, they represent evolution, not revolution.
As for Bitcoin and other decentralized crypto assets, none has become a currency because none is a unit of account, scalable means of payment, stable store of value or a numeraire (a benchmark for other similar assets). El Salvador went so far as to declare Bitcoin legal tender, but, at best, some 5% of transactions for goods and services are settled with it.
True, with the Trump administration creating a Strategic Bitcoin Reserve and with more institutional investors adding it to their portfolios, some believe that Bitcoin will become a store of value over time. But this has yet to be tested.
What other possibilities do distributed-ledger technologies (DLTs) create? Leaving aside crypto assets, which will remain volatile tokens for speculative activities, three other options have emerged: central bank digital currencies (CBDCs), stablecoins and tokenized deposits.
Fears that CBDCs would disintermediate banks or facilitate bank runs in times of financial panic have diminished, now that limits are likely to be imposed on CBDC balances. In most cases, central banks will aim only to provide a public safe asset for people's digital wallets, rather than an alternative to private-sector payment systems; and most CBDCs will not be either 'programmable' or interest yielding.
This story is from the October 06, 2025 edition of Mint Chennai.
Subscribe to Magzter GOLD to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 10,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
MORE STORIES FROM Mint Chennai
Mint Chennai
Al nostalgia has a new generation loving the 1980s
The baffling popularity of Al-generated 80's videos and other news this week
1 min
November 26, 2025
Mint Chennai
Apple iPhone 17 vs Google Pixel 10: a ₹80,000 close call
In a face-off between the iPhone 17 and Google Pixel 10, find out which flagship phone deserves your investment
3 mins
November 26, 2025
Mint Chennai
IndoSpace Core acquires six logistics parks for over $300 mn
IndoSpace Core, a joint venture between the Canada Pension Plan Investment Board, or CPP Investments, and IndoSpace, has acquired six industrial and logistics parks valued at over $300 million.
1 min
November 26, 2025
Mint Chennai
India’s first privately made PSLV is close to lift-off
handling the core hardware manufacturing part of the deal, and if all goes well, we should see multiple PSLV launches in 2026 itself,” said Amit Ramchandani, senior vice-president and head of precision engineering and systems at L&T, confirming the launch timeline.
2 mins
November 26, 2025
Mint Chennai
Let ‘nowcasts’ precede our economic numbers
‘Nowcasting’ that captures data from early indicators could aid policymaking, especially in the face of high economic uncertainty. But it must supplement existing data, not supplant it
2 mins
November 26, 2025
Mint Chennai
Businesses mustn't wait for a global climate consensus
This year’s United Nations climate summit in Belém, Brazil, ended last week. Countries made promises on paper and avoided hard decisions. Having gathered nearly 200 nations to chart out climate action, CoP-30 produced a ‘Belém Political Package’ that deferred questions rather than answer them. We should not pretend that this is progress.
3 mins
November 26, 2025
Mint Chennai
Ore shortage hits Adani copper plant
Indian tycoon Gautam Adani’s $1.2 billion copper smelter in Gujarat is receiving only a fraction of the ore required to operate the 500,000-tonne-a-year plant at full capacity, as a global supply squeeze tightens.
1 min
November 26, 2025
Mint Chennai
New emission norms for small tractors likely to be deferred
The Centre is set to give Indian tractor makers major relief by delaying the rollout of the next phase of emission rules—the Tractor and Machinery Emission Standards V (TREM V)—for tractors below 50 horsepower (HP), two officials told Mint.
1 mins
November 26, 2025
Mint Chennai
PPFAS’s new fund to run like an index fund, with an edge
Fund will use futures market discounts, merger opportunities and index-rebalancing tactics
3 mins
November 26, 2025
Mint Chennai
Wipro to enter pet foods with ‘HappyFur’
Wipro Consumer Care and Lighting, the consumer venture of Wipro Enterprises, is set to enter India’s fast-growing pet food market with a new brand, ‘HappyFur’, said three people aware of the plan.
2 mins
November 26, 2025
Listen
Translate
Change font size

