Introduction: Remittances are still expensive in a digital world
India is the world’s largest recipient of remittances, with millions of transactions flowing in from the global Indian diaspora every year. These funds play a critical role in household income, savings, and financial stability.
Despite advances in digital payments, one problem remains persistent:
Cross-border remittances are still slow, expensive, and dependent on multiple intermediaries.
This is where cross-border CBDC settlement is emerging as a potential structural breakthrough.
The Market Gap: Too many intermediaries in global money movement
Today’s remittance flow typically involves:
Sending bank
Correspondent banking network
Foreign exchange intermediaries
Receiving bank
Payment processors
Each layer adds:
Transaction fees
Currency conversion costs
Settlement delays
Operational friction
What cross-border CBDC settlement means
Cross-border CBDC settlement refers to:
The direct transfer of central bank digital currencies between countries using interoperable digital currency systems, eliminating multiple intermediary layers.
In simple terms:
Money moves directly between central bank systems
Settlement happens in real time or near real time
Fewer intermediaries are involved
Why remittance costs are so high today
1. Correspondent banking fees
Multiple banks participate in a single transaction.
2. FX conversion spreads
Currency exchange margins add hidden costs.
3. Processing delays
Settlement cycles can take hours or days.
4. Compliance overhead
AML and KYC processes add operational cost.
5. Infrastructure fragmentation
Different payment systems do not fully interoperate.
How CBDC reduces remittance costs
1. Fewer intermediaries
Direct central bank-to-central bank settlement reduces layers.
2. Faster settlement cycles
Transactions can be completed in seconds or minutes.
3. Lower FX conversion friction
Digital currency exchange can be more transparent and efficient.
4. Reduced operational overhead
Automation reduces manual processing costs.
5. Real-time reconciliation
Settlement and verification happen simultaneously.
Why the 80% cost reduction is possible
While exact figures depend on system design, cost reduction potential comes from:
Eliminating correspondent banking chains
Reducing foreign exchange spreads
Automating compliance checks
Lowering settlement delays
Reducing operational intermediaries
Together, these efficiencies can significantly compress total transaction costs.
Role of India’s digital payments ecosystem
India already operates one of the most advanced real-time payment systems globally.
Platforms like
Unified Payments Interface (UPI)
have demonstrated how instant, interoperable, and scalable payment infrastructure can transform domestic transactions.
However, UPI primarily operates within domestic banking systems. Cross-border CBDC settlement extends this concept to international financial flows.
How cross-border CBDC networks could work
1. Interoperable central bank systems
Countries connect CBDC infrastructures.
2. Real-time settlement layer
Transactions are settled instantly across borders.
3. FX integration at protocol level
Currency conversion happens within the system.
4. Compliance embedded in transaction flow
Regulatory checks are automated.
5. Direct wallet-to-wallet transfers
Users experience simplified international payments.
Benefits for India
1. Lower remittance costs
More money reaches households directly.
2. Faster fund availability
Near-instant settlement improves liquidity.
3. Reduced dependency on intermediaries
Less reliance on traditional correspondent banking.
4. Improved financial transparency
Clear tracking of cross-border flows.
5. Strengthened diaspora financial connectivity
Easier and cheaper global transfers.
Challenges in cross-border CBDC adoption
1. Interoperability standards
Countries must agree on shared protocols.
2. FX policy alignment
Currency conversion frameworks must be standardized.
3. Regulatory coordination
Multiple jurisdictions need harmonized rules.
4. Cybersecurity risks
Cross-border digital systems must be highly secure.
5. Geopolitical considerations
Monetary sovereignty concerns may arise.
Strategic implications for global finance
1. Shift from banking networks to digital currency networks
Traditional correspondent banking may reduce in relevance.
2. Rise of programmable cross-border money
Payments become automated and rule-based.
3. Increased financial system efficiency
Reduced friction in global capital movement.
4. Greater inclusion for migrant workers
Cheaper remittances benefit lower-income users.
Future outlook: CBDC corridors replacing legacy remittance rails
Over the next 3–5 years, cross-border CBDC systems may evolve into:
1. Bilateral CBDC corridors
Direct settlement between two countries.
2. Multilateral CBDC networks
Shared platforms across multiple economies.
3. Instant global remittance systems
Real-time international transfers.
4. Integrated FX and settlement layers
Unified currency conversion and transfer systems.
Conclusion: Remittances are becoming a software problem
Cross-border CBDC settlement has the potential to fundamentally redesign how money moves across borders.
We are moving from:
Multi-layer banking networks → direct digital settlement systems
High-cost remittance flows → low-cost programmable transfers
Slow international payments → real-time global money movement
At its core, this transformation is about one idea:
Global remittances are no longer just a banking process. They are becoming a programmable digital infrastructure problem.
For India, CBDC-based remittance systems could redefine how efficiently global income flows reach millions of households.