Introduction: Infrastructure decides who scales in finance
In every major financial transformation, there is a hidden layer that determines success or failure: infrastructure.
Payments, identity, credit systems, and settlement networks do not scale because of individual innovation alone. They scale because shared infrastructure exists in the background.
India has already proven this at national scale with digital public infrastructure.
At a strategic level, we are now entering a new phase:
Blockchain is emerging as a candidate for India’s next-generation public financial infrastructure layer, where shared systems act as public goods for banks, fintechs, and regulators.
This shifts blockchain from a corporate tool to a national utility model.
The Market Gap: Financial systems are still too fragmented
Despite rapid digitization, India’s financial ecosystem still faces structural fragmentation:
1. Siloed banking infrastructure
Each institution maintains separate systems for core functions.
2. Duplicate verification systems
KYC, compliance, and onboarding are repeated across institutions.
3. High reconciliation costs
Cross-institution data matching remains expensive.
4. Limited interoperability
Systems do not naturally communicate in real time.
5. Innovation bottlenecks
Startups and smaller institutions struggle to integrate with legacy rails.
The shift: From isolated systems to shared infrastructure
Blockchain introduces a new paradigm:
A shared, distributed financial infrastructure where multiple institutions operate on the same trusted ledger without losing control or security.
This creates:
Common settlement rails
Shared identity and compliance layers
Unified audit systems
Interoperable financial networks
What does “Blockchain as a public good” mean?
A public good in infrastructure terms is:
A system that is widely accessible, shared across institutions, and designed to benefit the entire ecosystem rather than a single entity.
In the context of blockchain, this means:
Shared ledger infrastructure
Consortium-based governance
Open participation for regulated entities
Standardized financial protocols
Reduced duplication of infrastructure investment
Why India needs blockchain as shared infrastructure
India’s financial ecosystem operates at massive scale with high transaction volumes and diverse stakeholders.
Key requirements include:
Real-time settlement systems
Low-cost financial operations
Secure identity verification
Scalable compliance systems
Interoperable banking infrastructure
Digital systems like
Unified Payments Interface (UPI)
have already shown how shared infrastructure can transform financial access and efficiency at national scale. Blockchain can extend this model to deeper financial layers like credit, trade finance, and compliance.
How shared blockchain infrastructure works in practice
1. Consortium-based networks
Banks and regulators jointly operate blockchain nodes.
2. Shared transaction ledger
All financial transactions are recorded in a common system.
3. Permissioned access
Only verified institutions participate in the network.
4. Standardized protocols
Uniform rules for data exchange and validation.
5. Real-time synchronization
All participants see consistent, updated data.
Strategic use cases of blockchain as public infrastructure
1. Interbank settlement systems
Faster and more transparent fund transfers.
2. Shared KYC infrastructure
Reusable identity verification across financial institutions.
3. Trade finance networks
Digitized and transparent cross-border trade documentation.
4. Regulatory reporting systems
Real-time compliance dashboards for regulators.
5. Credit information systems
Unified and tamper-proof credit histories.
Economic benefits of shared blockchain infrastructure
1. Reduced duplication of systems
Institutions no longer build isolated solutions.
2. Lower operational costs
Shared infrastructure reduces maintenance overhead.
3. Faster innovation cycles
Startups can build on common financial rails.
4. Improved systemic efficiency
Reduced reconciliation and settlement delays.
5. Stronger financial inclusion
Lower entry barriers for new financial participants.
Governance: The most critical success factor
Blockchain as a public good requires strong governance design:
1. Consortium governance models
Shared decision-making across institutions.
2. Regulatory oversight
Central authorities ensure compliance and stability.
3. Standardization frameworks
Uniform technical and operational rules.
4. Data ownership clarity
Clear rights over financial and identity data.
Challenges in building shared blockchain infrastructure
1. Coordination complexity
Multiple stakeholders must align incentives.
2. Legacy system integration
Existing financial infrastructure is deeply entrenched.
3. Policy evolution
Regulatory frameworks must adapt to distributed systems.
4. Scalability requirements
Systems must handle national-scale transaction volumes.
Future outlook: Financial systems as shared digital utilities
Over the next 3–5 years, blockchain-based public financial infrastructure could evolve into:
1. National financial ledger systems
Unified infrastructure for key financial processes.
2. Real-time settlement ecosystems
Instant cross-institution transactions.
3. Interoperable financial layers
Seamless integration across banking and fintech systems.
4. Programmable regulatory systems
Compliance rules embedded directly into infrastructure.
In this future, financial systems will behave more like utilities than isolated enterprise systems.
Conclusion: Infrastructure is the real competitive advantage
Blockchain is often discussed as a technology innovation. But at scale, its real value lies in infrastructure design.
We are moving from:
Fragmented financial systems → shared digital rails
Institution-specific infrastructure → ecosystem-wide platforms
Reactive regulation → embedded compliance systems
At its core, this transformation is about one key idea:
The most powerful financial systems are not owned by a single institution but shared as trusted infrastructure across the ecosystem.
For India, treating blockchain as a public good is not just a technological choice.
It is a strategic step toward building a more efficient, interoperable, and future-ready financial system.