Regulation & Policy
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Senior English Editor
India’s central bank has proposed linking the central bank digital currencies (CBDCs) of BRICS nations to facilitate cross-border trade and tourism payments, potentially reducing reliance on the U.S. dollar amid rising geopolitical tensions. The proposal, if accepted, would mark the first formal initiative to connect the digital currencies of Brazil, Russia, India, China, and South Africa.
According to sources familiar with the matter, the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) has recommended that this initiative be included on the agenda for the 2026 BRICS summit, which India will host later this year, as reported by Reuters. While the proposal remains in the early stages, its adoption could signal a significant step toward interoperability between sovereign digital currencies in the bloc.
The RBI’s recommendation builds on a 2025 declaration at the Rio de Janeiro BRICS summit, which emphasized the need to make cross-border transactions more efficient through interoperable payment systems. India has already expressed public interest in linking the e-rupee with other BRICS CBDCs to accelerate transactions and increase the global utility of its digital currency.
Currently, all five core BRICS members are running pilot CBDC programs. India’s e-rupee, launched in December 2022, has attracted over 7 million retail users. China’s digital yuan is being promoted for international use, while other members are exploring interoperable technologies to integrate their digital currencies.
Sources caution that linking CBDCs across BRICS nations will require consensus on technological platforms, governance rules, and methods to settle trade imbalances. One proposed approach involves bilateral foreign exchange swap arrangements between central banks, allowing countries to manage imbalanced trade flows more efficiently.
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Past attempts to conduct trade in local currencies have encountered practical hurdles. For instance, Russia previously accumulated large Indian rupee balances that could not be fully utilized, prompting India to allow the investment of such balances in local bonds. Effective CBDC linkages would likely need regular settlements, either weekly or monthly, to manage similar challenges.
The initiative is expected to draw scrutiny from the U.S., which has historically warned against moves to bypass the dollar in international trade. Former U.S. President Donald Trump has labeled BRICS as “anti-American” and threatened tariffs on its members. India, meanwhile, has been navigating a delicate geopolitical balance, maintaining trade relations with both BRICS members and the U.S., while exploring the strategic potential of sovereign digital currencies.
From an analytical perspective, India’s proposal reflects a pragmatic evolution of the global digital finance landscape. While BRICS countries have long discussed reducing reliance on the dollar, linking CBDCs represents a more actionable approach: it leverages existing pilot programs, builds on established payment infrastructure, and provides a regulated alternative to stablecoins, whose adoption could fragment national payment ecosystems.
By proposing interoperable CBDCs, India positions the e-rupee not just as a domestic innovation, but as a potential regional trade and settlement instrument. This move also reinforces the notion that CBDCs are increasingly central to geopolitical strategy: they allow emerging economies to enhance financial sovereignty while maintaining regulatory oversight.
However, technical and governance challenges cannot be understated. Differences in payment system architecture, regulatory frameworks, and risk tolerance across BRICS nations could slow adoption. Success will likely depend on bilateral agreements and gradual pilot integrations rather than a single, simultaneous launch.
For the global digital asset ecosystem, this initiative signals a shift from speculative adoption to state-backed digital currency experimentation, highlighting the growing role of central banks in shaping the architecture of international payments. Investors, regulators, and fintech innovators should monitor developments closely, as BRICS CBDC interoperability could reshape cross-border trade and introduce new dynamics to the international monetary system.




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