As India Goes Cashless, Both E-Money Stocks and Bitcoin Benefit
India’s Prime Minister Narendra Modi announced on November 9, 2016, that 500 and 1000 rupee notes would be taken out of circulation in an effort to reduce corruption, terrorism, black money and counterfeiting, and will no longer be accepted as legal tender in India. His surprise announcement caused chaos in the country as citizens scrambled to adjust to....
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This is the year that eCommerce will see big development in India. Morgan Stanley Research reports a 50% increase from last year. They rank India as the 10th largest economy in the world, with a forecasted GDP growth of around 5.5%. The National Payments Corp of India is projected to make e-commerce dealings easier by enabling micropayments and person-to-person payments. They will use a unified payment interface (UPI). In India, this UPI is one of many innovations taking place in the financial sector that will benefit the customer, and will help make India a cashless society, says Reserve....
We are living in a brave new world here in India. Enough has been written about the “end of cash” and how there will be a day when we will all be using digital money. Well that future has arrived for the one bln plus people of India. Ever since the demonetization of the Rs. 500 and Rs. 1000 banknotes on the midnight of Oct. 9, 2016, life has turned into a ghastly nightmare for billions of teeming masses. Things that we took for granted have become a challenge, not unequal to climbing the highest of Himalayan peaks. Welcome to cashless chaos, the story of a demonetized India. Cash starved....
The rate of adoption of mobile money and bitcoin is increasing in the Philippines, driving the country towards a cashless economy. The Asian countries have exhibited tremendous economic growth in the past few years. While China and India make the icing on the cake, Philippines is right around the corner. As the country’s economy grows, adoption of latest technology in the economic sector should also grow hand-in-hand. In order to keep up with the technological advancements, while ensuring the benefit of the masses, the country is slowly inching towards a cashless society. The country’s....
How do you take the hatchet to one of the fastest growing economies in the world? Simple: Remove 86 percent of the circulating currency and call it an anti-corruption measure. Prime Minister Modi of India and his sidekick Urjit Patel, governor of the Reserve Bank Of India, seem to have gone ahead and done just that. Now that you don’t have any circulating cash, hey presto, you have a cashless economy. Welcome to the brave new India. Cashless economy ahoy! Indians are discovering that without their familiar Rs.500 and Rs.1000 banknotes that made up nearly 86 percent of all circulating cash,....
India has been a little slower than many Western - and indeed Asian - nations in its adoption of digital currency, but it looks as though we are finally seeing some movement in the right direction. In a television interview released earlier today, Raghuram Rajan, Gov of the reserve bank of India, voiced is opinion on bitcoin and its likely future in India. Seemingly in strong support for bitcoin adoption, the governor responded to a question from the audience of the television programme being filmed. He had this to say: I have no doubt that down the line, we will be moving towards....