Toronto Star

1.5 MILLION JOBS LOST

- VIDHI DOSHI

NEW DELHI— When Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi announced the replacemen­t of 80 per cent of India’s cash in 2016, he sparked a currency crisis that led to huge job losses, stalled growth and hit India’s vast informal sector.

For months, people had to line up at banks and ATMs — sometimes for more than eight hours — to withdraw limited amounts of cash to pay bills or buy daily groceries.

Their troubles were a sacrifice for the nation, Modi said at the time. Old notes would be handed back to the banks and the vast reserves of untaxed “black money” being used for dodgy deals between fat cat businessme­n, dirty politician­s and Pakistani terrorists would be invalidate­d in one fell swoop.

Now, data from the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) shows that 99.3 per cent of high-value notes in circulatio­n — worth around $216 billion (U.S.) — came back to the banks. That means that those illicit hoards that the government was hoping to flush out of the system were not in the form of cash and are still out there.

“The RBI has in effect said that the prime minister’s premises and claims were dubious, and in as much words he didn’t know what he was talking about or getting into,” said Mohan Guruswamy, founder of the Center for Policy Alternativ­es.

India’s economy runs mostly on cash, so Modi’s demonetiza­tion thoroughly shook the country. The New Delhi-based Centre for Monitoring the Indian Economy estimated that the shock move caused1.5 million in job losses, though other economists have put the number lower.

After Modi’s bombshell announceme­nt, small businessme­n said their customers stopped coming because they had no cash. Marriages were delayed because cash stacked up to pay for venues and caterers was now worthless. Millionair­es joked about borrowing cash from their maids to buy cups of chai.

At a news conference in New Delhi on Wednesday, reporters pelted Subhash Chandra Garg, secretary of the Department of Economic Af- fairs, with questions about whether the problem of the black money had been solved.

“I think demonetiza­tion achieved a substantia­l number of its objectives,” he said, pointing out that the new notes had “new security features” to making counterfei­ting more difficult and that digital payments in India are increasing — both points that were disputed by journalist­s.

India’s economy is now showing signs of recovery after the disruption­s of demonetiza­tion, the RBI report said. Growth rates that slowed to a four-year low, in part due to the “lingering impact of demonetiza­tion,” have now bounced back.

 ?? ARUN SANKAR AFP/GETTY IMAGES ?? A member of the Communist Party of India displays a 1000-rupee note at a protest against the withdrawal of high-value banknotes from circulatio­n.
ARUN SANKAR AFP/GETTY IMAGES A member of the Communist Party of India displays a 1000-rupee note at a protest against the withdrawal of high-value banknotes from circulatio­n.

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