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Friday, November 28, 2025
YourTurnSubscriberWrites: Cryptocurrency and the new age of money laundering

SubscriberWrites: Cryptocurrency and the new age of money laundering

To address this challenge, India needs a balanced approach: allowing innovation and investment while enforcing strict checks to prevent illegal use.

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Cryptocurrency entered the world promising freedom, privacy, and a financial system without borders. It attracted young investors, tech-enthusiasts, and people who wanted faster, cheaper ways to move money. But like every powerful technology, it has also opened the door to misuse. Today, cryptocurrency has quietly become one of the newest and fastest-growing tools for money laundering, posing a serious challenge for governments and financial watchdogs. What was once seen as a harmless digital experiment is now deeply woven into global criminal networks, and India cannot afford to ignore this rising threat.

The biggest attraction of cryptocurrency for criminals is its ability to hide identities. While transactions on blockchains are recorded publicly, the people behind those transactions often remain unknown. Criminals use this anonymity to convert illegal money into digital currencies, move it across borders within minutes, and convert it back into “clean” money. Unlike traditional banking, where every transfer can be traced and verified, cryptocurrency allows transactions to bypass banks and regulators entirely. This ease of movement has been a blessing for cybercriminals, drug traffickers, ransomware groups, and even certain terror-linked networks that seek to raise and distribute funds secretly.

The rise of cryptocurrency exchanges has added another layer of difficulty. Many exchanges operate from countries with weak regulations, making it almost impossible for Indian agencies to obtain user information or track suspicious activities. Criminals often break large amounts into smaller transactions, a method known as “smurfing”, to avoid raising alarms. Some even use advanced tools called “mixers” and “tumblers,” which blend multiple crypto transactions together so that the origins become almost impossible to trace. These digital tricks allow black money to be cleaned with far greater speed and efficiency than any traditional laundering operation.

India has already seen signs of this problem growing. Several cyber-fraud cases, drug trafficking rackets, and illegal betting networks have been found using cryptocurrency to hide their financial trails. The Enforcement Directorate and other agencies have repeatedly flagged how digital currencies are being used to siphon off crores of rupees outside the country. With more Indians investing in crypto and more exchanges operating online, the risk is only increasing. While most investors use cryptocurrency legally, the actions of a small criminal section can destabilise the system and threaten national security.

The global picture is equally worrying. Countries like the United States, the United Kingdom, Japan, and South Korea have all reported a sharp rise in crypto-linked crimes. International police agencies have warned that money laundering through digital currencies is growing faster than the ability of governments to regulate it. This imbalance between fast technology and slow regulation is exactly what criminals exploit.

To address this challenge, India needs a clear and strong regulatory framework. For years, the debate around cryptocurrency in India has swung between complete bans and complete freedom. But neither extreme will work. What the country needs is a balanced approach: allowing innovation and investment while enforcing strict checks to prevent illegal use. Exchanges must be required to follow strict “Know Your Customer” norms, report suspicious transactions, and cooperate with law-enforcement agencies. Foreign exchanges operating in India’s market must also comply with Indian regulations or be blocked.

Public awareness is equally important. Many ordinary citizens fall for scams related to cryptocurrency because they do not fully understand how it works. Educating people about risks and warning signs can help reduce fraud and make it harder for criminals to exploit innocent investors.

The world is entering a new financial era, and cryptocurrency will continue to grow, whether governments like it or not. The goal is not to stop digital currencies but to stop their misuse. If countries move quickly, collaborate internationally, and update their laws to match the speed of technology, cryptocurrencies can be used responsibly. But if regulation continues to lag behind innovation, criminals will keep finding new ways to hide their money in the digital shadows.

For India, the choice is clear: act now, or risk letting cryptocurrency become the preferred currency of crime.

These pieces are being published as they have been received – they have not been edited/fact-checked by ThePrint.

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