The Phnom Penh Post

Indians protest ban on banknotes

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TENS of thousands of people turned out yesterday for nationwide protests against India’s controvers­ial ban on high-value banknotes, which opposition party organisers say has caused a “financial emergency”.

India is still reeling from Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s shock decision nearly three weeks ago to pull 86 percent of the currency from circulatio­n overnight, triggering a chronic shortage of notes in an economy that operates almost entirely on cash.

Around 25,000 people took to the streets of the eastern city of Kolkata, capital of West Bengal state, whose left-wing Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee has warned of “riots and epidemics” if the ban continues.

An estimated 6,000 more turned out to protest in Mumbai, India’s western commercial hub, police said.

However many ordinary Indians say they support the scheme if it forces the rich to pay their taxes by making them bank undeclared income. Only a handful of states observed a call for a nationwide protest strike.

“We are protesting against the undeclared financial emergency imposed by the government and the hardships people across the country are facing because of this illegal deci- sion,” said Manish Tiwari of the opposition Congress party.

Owners of the banned 500 and 1,000 rupee ($7.30 and $14.60) notes have until the end of the year to deposit them in a bank, and can only exchange a small number for new currency.

But authoritie­s have struggled to print enough new notes to meet demand and economists say the ensuing cash crunch will hit growth.

Former prime minister Manmohan Singh, a respected economist, said last week it would shave at least two percentage points off growth, which topped seven percent in the first half of the financial year.

“I do not disagree with the objectives but it is a monumental case of mismanagem­ent,” the Congress party lawmaker told parliament.

Over 90 percent of transactio­ns in India are conducted in cash and the country’s poorest have no access to banking.

Many have been left without enough cash to buy food or daily essentials, while farmers have been unable to buy seeds and small traders say business has fallen off a cliff.

Nonetheles­s Modi has repeatedly defended the scheme, accusing its detractors of being tax evaders and urging all Indians to switch to non-cash payment methods.

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