Millennium Post

BLACK MONEY IS BACK IN NEW NOTES

Cash-starved poor losing patience with the NDA government's latest measure

- NANTOO BANERJEE

It is official. Black money is back. Cash sharks — doctors, businesspe­ople, hawala operators, lower court practition­ers, brokers, transport operators, shopkeeper­s, traders and agents of all sorts — have returned to their respective dealings in cash, mocking at the government's much-orchestrat­ed purpose of demonetisi­ng high-value notes to strike hard at black money hoarders. Last week's tax raids in Bengaluru unearthed Rs. 5.7 crore, all in new high-value currencies. An Enforcemen­t Directorat­e (ED) raid found over Rs. 10 lakh in cash, also in new notes, from a physician's chamber in Kolkata. They showed, if anything, black money operations started across the country probably from the very next day of demonetisa­tion. It seems demonetisa­tion generated little impact on black money operators while the poor continues to suffer the most for cash. Part-time workers are losing jobs. Many senior citizens have lost their lives. Not many bank branches have enough cash to meet demands from depositors. Cash withdrawal limits continue. Of over 2,00,000 ATMS in the country, only 35,000 are reportedly working.

Post-demonetisa­tion, low salaried workers in small and medium industries (SMES), employing less than 20 employees, had to put up with a difficult situation on their first monthly salary day on December 1, as the employers could collect only Rs. 50,000 each in cash from their current accounts to pay monthly wages to their employees despite the fact they may be having deposits of over lakhs or crores of rupees in their bank accounts. Most of the employees had to remain satisfied with cheque payments this time. These employees don't shop in malls, department stores or big groceries. They need cash to buy their daily dire necessitie­s from small shops, roadside hawkers and local market vendors who may not have even seen a POS machine. The payday appeared to be a day of agony for most of these people.

The raids in Kolkata and Bengaluru also suggest that demonetisa­tion is hardly the right medicine to free the society from the menacing diseases of black money operation, fake note circulatio­n and terror funding. Incidental­ly, a bunch of terrorists, or maybe Pakistani militia, managed to enter an Indian army officers' mess in Jammu & Kashmir, killing some seven persons, including two senior military officers, also within three weeks of demonetisa­tion. It not clear if they were also carrying new Indian currency notes to bribe their way into the well-planned armed adventure. No one is sure if fresh fake notes have surfaced already. The government has banned private chartered flights landing in small airports without the permission and knowledge of the local police to prevent the unauthoris­ed private transfer of substantia­l cash after one such case was lately detected in the north-eastern part of the country. The cash shortage from convention­al official sources such as banks and treasuries has made life miserable for most citizens. For the unaccounte­d cash rich, life has remained almost normal.

Cash shortage has hurt micro-economy badly. Available economic data show a sharp decline in production and consumptio­n of most commoditie­s — industrial or agricultur­al. The wholesale rates of fruits, vegetables and other perishable­s have crashed. Retail prices are dipping for want of regular small buyers. Banks and their employees are fully stretched. Reserve Bank and the government are issuing circulars almost daily. Obviously, they weren't sure about the multiple microlevel impacts of demonetisa­tion. Banks are getting increasing­ly worried about public anger and system hackers. Some banks and ATMS have already been attacked. Now, large ones such as SBI, ICICI Bank, HDFC Bank and Axis Bank are gravely concerned about an unexpected surge of debit card transactio­ns that might tempt swindlers. They are said to be consulting profession­al firms for fraud risk management. According to Fidelity National Informatio­n Services (FIS), debit card transactio­ns have surged 300-400 percent. FIS operates a payment network for 75 banks and manages over 12,000 ATMS.

The simultaneo­us government push for a less cash economy has made public and private sector banks rush to procure point-of-sale (POS) machines to supply these card swiping terminals to merchants. They have placed orders for lakhs of terminals with POS procuring and manufactur­ing companies such as Ingenico, Verifone and Atom Technologi­es. Currently, there are about 1.5 million POS terminals in the country. Bankers say one million terminals are likely to be installed in the next six months. The government is said to have proposed an out-of-thebox solution to address cash shortage in rural areas by employing Aadhaar merchants. They are to be located in every rural village to facilitate small payments such as grocery or medical bills or even open bank account using biometric authentica­tion. The lightheart­ed demonetisa­tion is causing a major cash management problem.

Ironically, the cash shortage has hit the common man much more than the rich, for whom nothing has changed despite the fact that demonetisa­tion has junked 86 percent of currency in circulatio­n. Patience is running out as the cash-starved economy has taken a heavy toll on the income of wage-earners and farm workers. The common man's struggle for survival with little cash in hand may grow in the coming weeks and months as the government refuses to recognise the fact that cash serves as a lifeline to the rural economy and urban poor. India may need years or even decades to become a primarily cashless society. And, for that, India needs literate public and a well-coordinate­d digital economy and not demonetisa­tion. Unfortunat­ely, India stands far behind even many smaller countries in Asia in broadband connectivi­ty. No one knows this better than India's Telecom Authority (TRAI) chairman R.S. Sharma. The government seems to be totally confused about the link between demonetisa­tion and digital economy. Paradoxica­lly, neither works as an antidote to black money and fake currency. The easiest way to locate and punish black money hoards is to conduct a property census and link one's declared income with assets held. (The views expressed are strictly

personal.)

Ironically, the cash shortage has hit the common man much more than the rich, for whom nothing has changed despite the fact that demonetisa­tion has junked 86 percent of currency in circulatio­n. Patience is running out as the cashstarve­d economy has taken a heavy toll on the income of wage-earners and farm workers

 ??  ?? People wait in a queue outside a bank to deposit and exchange 500 and 1000 rupee notes (Representa­tional Image)
People wait in a queue outside a bank to deposit and exchange 500 and 1000 rupee notes (Representa­tional Image)
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