What is RBI nudging India to do at BRICS?

Now I have sufficient grounded facts. Let me write the study note.


UPSC Study Note: RBI Nudging India at BRICS — CBDCs for Cross-Border Payments


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution

Year Milestone
2009 BRICS grouping formalised (Brazil, Russia, India, China, South Africa)
2014 BRICS New Development Bank (NDB) established — early push toward non-dollar finance
Dec 2022 RBI launches e-rupee (₹e) retail pilot using blockchain-based technology [S3][S6]
Dec 2022 RBI also launches wholesale CBDC pilot for inter-bank settlement
Jan 2023 mBridge project (BIS Innovation Hub + China, UAE, Thailand, HK) demonstrates wholesale multi-CBDC cross-border settlement — a global reference model
Aug 2023 BRICS expands to 9 members (Egypt, Ethiopia, Iran, UAE join; Saudi Arabia invited); Indonesia joins later
2024 RBI Governor Sanjay Malhotra states RBI is using digital payments collaboration to boost cross-border trade [S7]
Oct 2025 RBI Deputy Governor confirms "no rush" on nationwide CBDC rollout; awaits global coordination frameworks [S8]
Jan 2026 RBI formally nudges government to push CBDC agenda at BRICS under India's Chairmanship [S1][S2]
May 2026 RBI announces cross-border CBDC pilots for 2026–27; in talks with 4–5 central banks [S4][S5]

Predecessor initiatives: UPI-based bilateral linkages (India–Singapore, India–UAE, India–Mauritius) are the immediate precursor model — CBDC multilateralism is the next logical step.


4. Core Static Facts

What is a CBDC? - Central Bank Digital Currency (CBDC): Legal tender issued by a central bank in purely digital form; not a cryptocurrency (no private issuer, no speculative asset). [S6] - Differs from UPI: UPI transfers rupees between bank accounts; CBDC (e-rupee) is held in a separate digital wallet and is itself a store of value — no bank account needed for holding. [S1]

India's CBDC — e-Rupee (₹e) - Launch: Wholesale pilot — Nov 2022; Retail pilot — Dec 1, 2022 [S3][S6] - Technology: Blockchain-based components [S6] - Users: ~7 million retail users as of early 2026 [Search result data] - Issuing authority: Reserve Bank of India - Legal basis: Amendments to RBI Act, 1934 and Payment and Settlement Systems Act, 2007 (enabling digital currency issuance)

BRICS Membership (as of 2026) - Founding 5 (2009): Brazil, Russia, India, China, South Africa - New members (2024): Egypt, Ethiopia, Iran, UAE, Indonesia (Saudi Arabia pending full accession) - India's BRICS Chairmanship year: 2026

Implementing bodies (India side) - Proposing authority: RBI - Decision authority: Ministry of Finance - Coordination: Ministry of External Affairs (for BRICS summit agenda)


5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Economic

Geopolitical / Strategic

Economic / Financial Stability Risks

Technological / Scientific

Legal / Constitutional

Governance / Ethical


6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)


7. Prelims Hooks


8. Mains Relevance

GS Papers: - GS-II: International Relations — BRICS, multilateral frameworks, India's foreign policy - GS-III: Indian Economy — Monetary policy, RBI, digital payments, financial technology, de-dollarisation

Syllabus Headings: - GS-II: Bilateral, regional and global groupings involving India; Effect of policies and politics of developed and developing countries on India's interests - GS-III: Indian economy and issues relating to planning, mobilisation of resources, growth, development and employment; Awareness in the fields of IT, computers, robotics, nano-technology, bio-technology

Plausible Mains Question Stems: 1. "The RBI's proposal to use CBDCs for BRICS cross-border payments is both an economic opportunity and a geopolitical signal. Examine." (GS-II/III, 15M) 2. "Central Bank Digital Currencies (CBDCs) are being positioned as instruments of de-dollarisation. Critically assess the opportunities and risks for India in this context." (GS-III, 15M) 3. "India's 2026 BRICS Chairmanship offers a strategic window to reshape global payment architecture. Discuss with reference to the RBI's CBDC initiatives." (GS-II, 10M)


9. Related Topics to Study Next

Topic Why Connected
UPI and India's digital payment ecosystem UPI is the domestic precedent; CBDC is the next-generation cross-border extension
De-dollarisation and BRICS currency debates The CBDC proposal is embedded in the broader de-dollarisation push within BRICS
New Development Bank (NDB) BRICS' existing financial institution; CBDC interoperability complements NDB's non-dollar lending
mBridge project (BIS) Leading global multi-CBDC cross-border pilot; reference architecture for BRICS model
SWIFT and alternative payment systems (CIPS, SPFS) Context for why BRICS seeks alternatives; Russia's SPFS and China's CIPS are parallel efforts
Financial Action Task Force (FATF) CBDC cross-border use must comply with FATF's AML/CFT standards; India's grey-listing risk awareness
India's Foreign Exchange Management Act (FEMA), 1999 Governs cross-border capital flows; CBDC interoperability will intersect with FEMA regulations

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. CBDC ≠ Cryptocurrency: Aspirants confuse e-rupee with Bitcoin or private stablecoins. CBDC is sovereign legal tender; crypto is private and volatile. The RBI has been explicitly critical of private crypto while promoting CBDC.

  2. UPI ≠ CBDC: UPI is a payment interface that moves rupees between bank accounts; e-rupee is a currency itself held in a digital wallet. The article excerpt explicitly draws this distinction — expect MCQ traps.

  3. Wrong Ministry: The RBI wrote to the Ministry of Finance, not the Ministry of External Affairs. The MEA handles BRICS summit logistics, but the financial policy recommendation went to Finance.

  4. BRICS membership count: Many aspirants cite "5 members." As of 2024–26, BRICS has 9+ members (original 5 + Egypt, Ethiopia, Iran, UAE, Indonesia). Saudi Arabia's accession is pending.

  5. India's BRICS Chairmanship year: India holds it in 2026 (not 2025). Russia held the 2024 Presidency; Brazil held 2025. Confusing chairmanship years is a common MCQ trap.


11. Sources


Note: Facts from S2, S4, S5, S7, S8 are Tier 4 (Indian journalism). Core definitional facts are anchored in Tier 1 (RBI, PIB) sources [S3, S6, S9]. The primary article [S1] is itself Tier 4 and was the originating source for this analysis.