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Demonetisation in India-News and updates

http://www.business-standard.com/ar...demonetisation-boondoggle-116120400015_1.html

Amartya Lahiri: The demonetisation boondoggle
In view of the costs and disruptions that have ensued, the scrapping of Rs 500 and Rs 1,000 notes was a sledgehammer move
It has now been over three weeks since the demonetisation of 86 per cent of India’s circulating cash. The main logic that has been given for the measure is that it is a decisive blow to holders of undeclared income, that is, black money. Black money has both a stock and a flow aspect. To assess the impact of the demonetisation we need a quantitative estimate for both of these aspects.

A recent World Bank survey suggests that the parallel economy is around 25 per cent of India’s GDP (gross domestic product), which gives us an estimate of the flow share of the underground economy. The wealth share of the underground economy is more difficult. A recent Credit Suisse study estimates the wealth-to-GDP ratio in India at around two. Assuming that wealth creation is similar for both declared and undeclared income, this would suggest that black wealth is about 50 per cent of GDP. It is likely larger, since the savings rate out of undeclared income is probably greater than that out of declared income. Nevertheless, armed with these two estimates, let us go through the impact of the demonetisation move.

How much can the demonetisation mop up? One measure would be how much is exchanged as a share of what was demonetised. The demonetised money is about 10 per cent of GDP. Even if the entire amount was left unexchanged, it would amount to around 40 per cent of the underground economy (or black income) and 20 per cent of black wealth. My guess is that about 85-90 per cent of the demonetised cash will be exchanged (note that as of November 28, around 60 per cent of the demonetised cash had already been turned in). Hence, the amount that this move will net will be around two to three per cent of the black wealth in India (or four to six per cent of black income).

These estimated numbers are rather small when compared with the overall stock of undeclared income held in other forms and in view of the disruption the move has created. This is primarily because most undeclared income is not held in cash but rather in gold, jewellery, real estate, foreign currency or quickly laundered through round tripping. Ironically, the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) is now issuing Rs 2,000 rupee notes, which will make it marginally simpler to use cash to store undeclared income.

What about the costs of the move? It is very unlikely that the move will have serious long-term implications, save for one concern that I will highlight below. The short-run costs, however, are unlikely to be insignificant. As has been pointed out by a number of different commentators and analysts, the Indian economy is heavily cash-dependent. The informal sector in particular depends almost exclusively on cash for transactions. Given that this sector accounts for 80 per cent of employment and 45 per cent of GDP, the costs can clearly be large. Assessing the size of these costs can however be difficult.

Given that the disruption is due to people not having cash to make payments, one way forward is to use a macroeconomic model that is based on the transactions motive for holding cash. This model is fairly rudimentary and is known as the “Quantity Theory of Money”. The theory predicts that for a given speed with which money circulates, a fall in money supply would translate into a fall in nominal GDP. Thus, suppose 85 per cent of the demonetised cash is returned by December 31. As long as inflation remains as expected, the quantity theory would predict that real GDP growth for FY16 would be 1.7 percentage points lower than expected.

There are a number of assumptions underlying this projection. By varying them, one could easily come up with real GDP growth reductions for FY16 that vary from a low of one per cent to a high of 3.5 per cent. Hence, one shouldn't be surprised if the cost ultimately comes in above two per cent of GDP growth. That is high.

There is one other important aspect worth noting. The demonetised currency was originally issued without any contingencies. Now the government has announced that these liabilities will only be redeemed if the holders can meet various conditions, such as satisfactorily documenting the source of the cash, and exchanging it within a given time period. These conditions were not there when the RBI originally issued these liabilities. This is akin to debt repudiation. Countries that repudiate their liabilities often pay a price in their future ability to issue similar liabilities due to a loss of credibility. While India might yet escape such a reputational hit, one nevertheless worries about the potential loss of credibility.

In terms of the creation of flows of black money, demonetisation will do nothing. The problem is getting people to pay taxes. Forcing people to use banks and provide tax identification numbers for large transactions will help in reducing the creation of black money flows. But these measures are independent of demonetisation.

The long-term goals of reducing the cash dependence of the economy and encouraging more financial inclusion are good. So is the desire to eliminate black money. But this is a sledgehammer move, given the costs and disruptions. It probably does signal the intent of the government which, if credible, could alter private sector behaviour. But that is a big unknown. All public policy must rely on a clear-headed cost-benefit analysis. This one appears to fail that test.



The writer is professor of economics and director of graduate studies at Vancouver School of Economics, University of British Columbia. Published with permission from Ideas for India (www.ideasforindia.in), an economics and policy portal
 
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I was just thinking. Did you maid ever tell this to you? "No sir, I am not going to stand at the long queues, it's better cash than a bank transfer"?
The thing here is, even if she's got the patience to stand at the queues, what are the chances of her getting the money?
Coming to bank queues -earlier bank and atm queues were quite longer means 100-150 people in line..but now a days i can see hardly 10-15 people in line..and after this month those queues will get more shorter..
I hope u got ur answer...
By the way in banks there is token system also if queues is long to exchange money .means one gets the token with a number on it like 60-70..he may come after one hour or wait outside..
Plus u know i hav not used cash from last 1 month..using paytm on kirana and vegetable stores :)
Also i said in above post that people are having some problem but they are supporting it bcz they know its going to help them ultimately. :)

1-2 More surgical strikes and Indian economy will self implode
Lol keep dreaming..
Fui- indian bullet train project itself cost 15billions $..in 15 billions of dollars at least 15 surgikal strikes can be made mate..again count precisly and then say how much surgical strike it will take to self explode indian economy-
Lol dont forget we have already billions of road,railway, infrastructure, nuclear reactors,solar plants :p
 
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http://economictimes.indiatimes.com...l-theres-enough-cash/articleshow/55798656.cms

Harried bankers want to shut shop till there’s enough cash
MUMBAI: Bank employees want branches to be closed until the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) supplies sufficient quantities of currency notes as irate customers increasingly harass staffers and indulge in arson and physical assault amid a cash shortage following demonetisation of high denomination notes last month.

"RBI should take a view to stop banking operations for 15 days till adequate money is available. Let RBI close the banks till money comes," said CH Venkatachalam, chief of the All India Bank Employees' Association (AIBEA). "This is an unplanned move — everyone supports removal of black money — but this won't remove black money and is harassing ordinary people and bank employees."

Bank employees have a difficult time explaining to customers why they run out of cash and the RBI must divulge its strategy on handling the current crisis, Venkatachalam said, ruling out any form of a strike because it would only add to the woes of the people. The Chennai-based AIBEA is the oldest and largest national trade union centre of bank employees in India.

The government invalidated Rs 1,000 and Rs 500 currency notes on November 9, pulling out about 85% of the money in circulation by value. Accompanying curbs on cash withdrawals from bank counters and ATMs have resulted in people waiting for hours to take money out of their accounts.

Demand for currency notes has exceeded the supply of new notes, which have to be sent to over 2 lakh ATMs and 1.35 lakh bank branches across the country, especially during the first week of the month, when salaries are paid.

Instances of bank staffers having been beaten up or locked up inside their branches for apparently no fault of theirs have surfaced from various parts of the country. Two days ago, a Punjab National BankBSE 1.14 % branch in Jamshedpur was ransacked as angry customers smashed glasses and injured a lady staffer. In Dhanbad, a bank branch was ransacked after the manager declared it had run out of cash.

The AIBEA has written to finance minister Arun Jaitley and the Indian Bank Associationseeking protection for staffers.

"There has been no action to our appeals to the finance minister, RBI and IBA. How can we manage when there is such scarcity of money in branches?" asked Venkatachalam. "We can't blame the people — how will they manage without cash? Hardly any ATMs are operating — it's complete chaos."

AIBEA has also appealed to the RBI to be transparent about its handling of demonetisation issue. It wants the central bank to disclose the quantum of currency printed and distributed to all banks on a daily basis. "RBI can't simply claim that they have supplied cash - half the branches don't have cash and the remaining are running out of cash very quickly," Venkatachalam said.

The AIBEA wrote to the finance minister on December 2, raising the issue of the acute cash shortage. "While RBI is repeatedly making public statements that adequate cash is being supplied to banks, the reality is otherwise," it said in the letter, a copy of which is with ET. "These statements are making the public to feel that RBI is supplying cash to banks and bank staff are deliberately not extending payments."
 
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Demonetisation fallout: Bank unions threaten to agitate, plan strike

http://www.business-standard.com/ar...en-to-agitate-plan-strike-116120501418_1.html

Bank unions are planning agitation, including strike, to highlight the heavy work pressure faced by employees in the wake of demonetisationand lack of improvement in supply of currency notes.

While the government and the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) say there has been some improvement in supply for currency notes in the system, the ground reality is different, say the unions.

C H Venkatachalam, general secretary of All India Bank Employees Association (AIBEA), told Business Standard that if the problems for bank employees continue, the unions would be compelled to strike.

According to Venkatachalam, many ATMs are running out of cash and people have to stand in long queues at bank branches, making them restless and unruly, escalating into quarrels with bank staff. Having to work under such circumstances affects employees’ physical as well as mental health, he added.

He said the situation is increasingly becoming unbearable and employees, including officers, are on the brink of losing their patience owing to sheer fatigue. They are unable to tell customers when the normal supply and flow of cash would be restored, AIBEA said.

While the problem of cash crunch still persists, lack of enough supply of small-denomination currency notes is also a problem because the banksare yet to get the new Rs 500 currency notes and customers are reluctant to accept Rs 2,000 notes.

Similarly, Rs 100 notes are also in short supply. As a result, ATMs are non-functional and branches are finding it tough to deal with agitated customers, the union noted.

Another problem is that RBI is supplying soiled and damaged Rs 100 currency notes, which customers are unwilling to accept. For employees also, dealing with soiled notes is a big health hazard, AIBEA said.
 
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defintely anti-Modi but written quite tastefully.
 
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http://www.ndtv.com/india-news/pm-m...n-nilekani-to-help-with-cash-clean-up-1635397

Prime Minister Narendra Modi has roped in a billionaire from the ranks of his adversaries to help.

Nandan Nilekani, a high-profile member of the opposition Indian National Congress party, has joined a committee to map a path to digital payments.

...........As startups like Paytm, MobiKwik and Freecharge push their digital wallets to a slice of smartphone users, the committee is focusing on two key avenues: getting more merchants to accept the United Payments Interface and procuring more point-of-sale devices.

The interface, rolled out by major banks in April, makes transferring money as easy as sending a text message. With the system already in place, Nilekani says boosting acceptance of the payments interface is achievable in weeks. Getting the estimated one million new POS devices, which would almost double the number in use as of August, would take longer because of the need for a tender.
 
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