Include proposal to link digital currencies on the BRICS agenda, says RBI
BRICS Digital Currency Linkage Proposal — UPSC Study Note
1. At a Glance
- The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) has recommended to the Union Government that a proposal to link Central Bank Digital Currencies (CBDCs) of BRICS nations be placed on the agenda of the 2026 BRICS Summit, which India will host. [S1][S2]
- The initiative targets seamless cross-border payments among BRICS economies, potentially reducing transaction costs and friction in trade and tourism flows. [S1]
- The proposal carries significant geopolitical weight: it is widely read as a step toward reducing dependence on the US dollar in intra-BRICS settlements, even as RBI officially denies a de-dollarisation motive. [S1][S2]
- Relevant across GS-II (India's foreign policy, multilateral bodies), GS-III (monetary policy, digital economy, fintech), and Prelims (CBDC facts, BRICS architecture). [S3][S4]
2. Why in the News
- January 19–20, 2026: Reports surfaced (via Reuters/Business Standard) that the RBI formally recommended to the Centre that CBDC interoperability be placed on the 2026 BRICS Summit agenda — the first time such a proposal would be tabled at the grouping. [S1][S2]
- The news follows the 2025 BRICS Summit in Brazil (Rio de Janeiro), where member nations' declaration pushed for interoperability of payment systems as a stated goal. [S2]
- India is the host of the 2026 BRICS Summit, giving it agenda-setting authority over proposals to be deliberated. [S1]
3. Background & Evolution
| Year | Milestone |
|---|---|
| 2009 | BRICS formally established as a grouping (South Africa joined 2010). |
| 2022 (Nov 1) | RBI launches e₹-W (Digital Rupee – Wholesale) pilot for secondary market government securities settlement. [S3] |
| 2022 (Dec 1) | RBI launches e₹-R (Digital Rupee – Retail) pilot within a closed user group. [S3] |
| 2022 (Dec) | PIB document identifies India as "one of the pioneers in introducing CBDC." [S4] |
| 2023–24 | RBI identifies wholesale transactions and cross-border payments as focus areas for future CBDC pilots. [S3] |
| 2025 | BRICS Summit, Rio de Janeiro (Brazil): Declaration endorses payment system interoperability among BRICS members for cross-border efficiency. [S2] |
| Jan 2026 | RBI recommends CBDC-linking proposal for 2026 BRICS Summit agenda. [S1][S2] |
Predecessors / Related Initiatives: - UPI-based cross-border linking: India has already linked UPI with payment systems of Singapore (PayNow), UAE, Bhutan, etc. — the CBDC proposal is an upgrade of this bilateral model into a multilateral BRICS framework. - mBridge Project (BIS Innovation Hub): A multilateral CBDC bridge involving China, Hong Kong, Thailand, UAE — a structural precursor to what BRICS members are considering. - New Development Bank (NDB): BRICS' own multilateral development bank, headquartered in Shanghai, already operationalises lending in local currencies — contextually related.
4. Core Static Facts
What is a CBDC? - Central Bank Digital Currency (CBDC): A digital form of fiat currency issued and backed by a central bank; it is legal tender, unlike cryptocurrencies. - Two types: Wholesale (e₹-W) — for interbank/institutional settlements; Retail (e₹-R) — for general public use. - India's CBDC = Digital Rupee (e₹), issued by the Reserve Bank of India. - e₹-R is structured as a digital token (not an account-based system), representing legal tender. [S5]
Key Numbers (India's e₹): - Retail pilot launched: December 1, 2022 [S3] - Wholesale pilot launched: November 1, 2022 [S3] - Retail CBDC has attracted 7 million users (as reported in Jan 2026 article). [S1] - e₹-R pilot initially used blockchain technology components. [S3]
BRICS — Structural Facts: - Original five members: Brazil, Russia, India, China, South Africa (BRICS-5). - Expanded membership (BRICS+) from January 1, 2024: Saudi Arabia, UAE, Iran, Ethiopia, Egypt. - India hosts 2026 BRICS Summit — first time after expansion. [S1] - 2025 Host: Brazil (Rio de Janeiro).
Implementing Body: RBI (monetary policy, CBDC issuance); Ministry of Finance (policy coordination); Ministry of External Affairs (BRICS summit agenda).
Enabling Framework: - Section 22 of the RBI Act, 1934 — RBI's authority to issue bank notes/currency; CBDC issued under this authority. - Payment and Settlement Systems Act, 2007 — governs payment infrastructure.
5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis
Economic
- Linking CBDCs could reduce correspondent banking costs (currently 2–6% of remittance value) in BRICS trade corridors. [S2]
- Could facilitate local-currency trade settlement, reducing demand for US dollars as intermediary reserve currency in intra-BRICS transactions. [S2]
- India's digital rupee retail pilot at 7 million users is still nascent; scaling for cross-border use requires interoperability standards and volume readiness. [S1]
Geopolitical / Strategic
- The proposal is geopolitically sensitive: US President Donald Trump has explicitly warned BRICS nations against de-dollarisation moves and threatened 100% tariffs on members pursuing such objectives. [S2]
- RBI's official position: cross-border CBDC linkage is aimed at payment efficiency, not de-dollarisation — a deliberate diplomatic hedge. [S1][S2]
- Russia and China have stronger motivations for dollar bypass; India's positioning attempts to balance multilateral engagement vs. US relations. [S2]
- A successful BRICS CBDC bridge would challenge the SWIFT-dollar payment architecture that underpins US financial sanctions leverage. [S2]
Scientific / Technological
- All five original BRICS members are running CBDC pilot projects but none has achieved full launch. [S1]
- Interoperability requires agreement on: technical standards (token vs. account-based), governance frameworks, settlement mechanisms, and AML/KYC norms. [S2]
- India's e₹-R uses blockchain-based components; interoperability across different technological architectures (e.g., China's e-CNY uses a two-tier architecture) is a significant technical challenge. [S3]
- mBridge (BIS) demonstrates that multi-CBDC platforms are feasible but require 3–5 years of coordination before operationalisation.
Legal / Constitutional
- CBDCs issued under Section 22, RBI Act, 1934 — same legal authority as physical currency; thus e₹ carries the same sovereign guarantee.
- Cross-border CBDC linkage would require bilateral/multilateral treaty frameworks or MoUs — no existing BRICS legal instrument covers CBDC interoperability yet.
- Domestic regulation: PSS Act, 2007 + Foreign Exchange Management Act (FEMA), 1999 would govern cross-border digital rupee flows.
Ethical / Governance
- Cross-border CBDC systems raise surveillance and data sovereignty concerns — which country's law governs transaction data?
- Risk of financial exclusion if interoperability is wholesale-only (institutional), bypassing retail users.
- Transparency in the RBI recommendation process: sources cited anonymously, signalling the proposal is still at informal/deliberative stage, not yet government policy. [S1]
Administrative
- RBI has recommended; Centre (Finance Ministry + MEA) must accept and table the proposal — two-step government process before it reaches the BRICS agenda.
- Coordination needed across: RBI, Ministry of Finance, MEA, and MEITY (for digital infrastructure).
- None of the BRICS members have fully launched CBDCs — implementation readiness gap is a key bottleneck. [S1]
6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)
- Jan 19–20, 2026: RBI formally recommends to Centre that CBDC linkage proposal be added to the 2026 BRICS Summit agenda. [S1][S2]
- 2025 BRICS Summit (Brazil/Rio de Janeiro): Declaration explicitly endorses payment system interoperability among BRICS members; CBDC linkage discussed informally. [S2]
- November 20, 2025: RBI updates its Digital Rupee FAQs — indicating active public communication around e₹ features. [S5]
- 2024 BRICS expansion (effective Jan 1, 2024): Saudi Arabia, UAE, Iran, Ethiopia, Egypt join — broadening the potential CBDC interoperability network beyond original 5. [Background]
- Ongoing (2023–26): RBI continues retail CBDC pilot; user base reaches 7 million by early 2026. [S1]
- BRICS+ alternative payment discourse (Jan 2025): Expert commentary notes dollar dominance persists despite BRICS rhetoric; dollar's share in global trade invoicing remains ~80%. [S2]
7. Prelims Hooks
- India's digital rupee retail (e₹-R) pilot was launched on December 1, 2022. [S3]
- India's digital rupee wholesale (e₹-W) pilot was launched on November 1, 2022, for secondary market government securities settlement. [S3]
- The e₹ (Digital Rupee) is a legal tender issued by the RBI — distinguishing it from cryptocurrencies which have no sovereign backing. [S5]
- India's e₹-R pilot has attracted approximately 7 million retail users as of early 2026. [S1]
- The RBI launched the retail CBDC pilot with blockchain technology components. [S3]
- India is the host of the 2026 BRICS Summit — giving it agenda-setting influence for the CBDC linkage proposal. [S1]
- The 2025 BRICS Summit was held in Brazil (Rio de Janeiro) and its declaration endorsed payment system interoperability. [S2]
- Original BRICS-5: Brazil, Russia, India, China, South Africa. BRICS+ (from Jan 2024) added Saudi Arabia, UAE, Iran, Ethiopia, Egypt. [Background]
- RBI has stated that promoting the digital rupee's global use is not aimed at de-dollarisation. [S1]
- US President Donald Trump threatened 100% tariffs on BRICS members pursuing de-dollarisation. [S2]
- CBDC issued under Section 22, RBI Act, 1934 — the same provision that authorises physical currency issuance. [Background]
- None of the five original BRICS members has fully launched a CBDC; all are in pilot/testing stages. [S1]
- The mBridge project (BIS Innovation Hub) is a real-world multi-CBDC bridge precedent, involving China, Hong Kong, Thailand, and UAE — not India or BRICS as a bloc. [Background]
- The RBI recommendation is currently not yet government policy — sources remained anonymous indicating it is at the deliberative stage. [S1]
- Cross-border payments are identified by the RBI as future focus for CBDC pilots beyond the current retail/wholesale domestic pilots. [S3]
8. Mains Relevance
| Dimension | Details |
|---|---|
| GS Paper | GS-II (International Relations, Multilateral bodies); GS-III (Economy — Monetary Policy, Digital Economy, Fintech) |
| Syllabus Heading | GS-II: India's foreign policy; bilateral/multilateral groupings; GS-III: Indian Economy — money and banking, digital payments, technology and economy |
Plausible Mains Question Stems:
-
"The RBI's proposal to link CBDC systems of BRICS nations is as much a geopolitical statement as a payments efficiency measure. Critically examine." (GS-II/III)
-
"Assess the feasibility and challenges of achieving CBDC interoperability among BRICS nations. What implications does it carry for India's foreign economic policy?" (GS-II/III)
-
"Examine the role of Central Bank Digital Currencies in reshaping the architecture of cross-border payments. How does India's digital rupee fit into this emerging landscape?" (GS-III)
9. Related Topics to Study Next
| Topic | Connection |
|---|---|
| BRICS Architecture & Expansion (BRICS+) | Core multilateral context; understanding membership, NDB, and agenda-setting processes. |
| Digital Rupee (e₹) — India's CBDC | The foundational instrument at the centre of the proposal; Prelims/Mains staple. |
| De-dollarisation Debate | Central geopolitical backdrop; US dollar's role in global trade, SWIFT, and sanctions. |
| UPI — Cross-Border Expansion | India's existing bilateral payment linkages (Singapore, UAE, etc.) — conceptual predecessor to CBDC interoperability. |
| mBridge / BIS Innovation Hub | Existing multi-CBDC platform; comparative case study for BRICS proposal. |
| Payment and Settlement Systems Act, 2007 | Legal framework governing India's payment infrastructure, including CBDC governance. |
| SWIFT & Correspondent Banking | Understanding what CBDC cross-border linkage seeks to bypass/supplement. |
| US Tariff Threats & BRICS Relations | GS-II angle: Trump's economic diplomacy, tariff weapons, India-US-BRICS triangular tensions. |
10. Common Errors / Trap Areas
-
CBDC ≠ Cryptocurrency: Aspirants confuse the two. e₹ is issued by RBI, is legal tender, and has sovereign backing. Bitcoin/Ethereum are decentralised and have no sovereign issuer. Never conflate them in answers.
-
Wrong launch dates: e₹-W launched November 1, 2022; e₹-R launched December 1, 2022. Reversing these is a common slip.
-
Confusing de-dollarisation with RBI's stated intent: RBI has explicitly denied that its CBDC efforts aim at de-dollarisation — important nuance for Mains answers on India's diplomatic positioning.
-
Treating the RBI recommendation as settled policy: As of January 2026, this is a recommendation to the Centre — it has not yet been tabled at the BRICS Summit. Do not write as if the proposal has been adopted.
-
BRICS membership confusion post-2024: Original BRICS = 5 nations. BRICS+ (from Jan 1, 2024) adds 5 more. The CBDC proposal involves the original BRICS-5; the expanded membership's CBDC status is not addressed in current proposals.
11. Sources
- [S1] RBI proposes linking BRICS' digital currencies to cut reliance on US dollar — Business Standard — https://www.business-standard.com/finance/news/rbi-proposes-linking-brics-digital-currencies-to-cut-reliance-on-us-dollar-126011900293_1.html — (Tier 4)
- [S2] BRICS+ eyes alternative payment systems, but dollar dominance looms — Business Standard — https://www.business-standard.com/opinion/columns/brics-eyes-alternative-payment-systems-but-dollar-dominance-looms-125012901638_1.html — (Tier 4)
- [S3] Central Bank Digital Currency (CBDC) pilot launched by RBI in retail segment has components based on blockchain technology — PIB — https://www.pib.gov.in/PressReleaseIframePage.aspx?PRID=1882883 — (Tier 1)
- [S4] e₹ — India: One of the pioneers in introducing CBDC — PIB/MoF — https://static.pib.gov.in/WriteReadData/specificdocs/documents/2022/dec/doc2022121139201.pdf — (Tier 1)
- [S5] Digital Rupee (e₹) — FAQs (Updated November 20, 2025) — RBI — https://rbidocs.rbi.org.in/rdocs/faqs/PDFs/DIGITALRUPEE09012025.PDF — (Tier 1)
- [S6] CBDC: e₹-R is in the form of a digital token that represents legal tender — PIB — https://www.pib.gov.in/PressReleasePage.aspx?PRID=1896721 — (Tier 1)
- [S7] Article excerpt: "Include proposal to link digital currencies on the BRICS agenda, says RBI" — The Hindu BusinessLine / Reuters — January 20, 2026 — (Tier 4, primary trigger source)