Business Standard

NOTE BAN IMPACT TRANSIENT: RBI PAPER

- ANUP ROY Mumbai, 10 March

A research paper by the staff at the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) has found that the impact of demonetisa­tion on the real economy has been transient, “given the informatio­n available so far.”

The paper, Macroecono­mic Impact of Demonetisa­tion — A Preliminar­y Assessment, was prepared by the staff of the monetary policy department with contributi­ons from other department­s. The conclusion of the paper, the authors warned, was not necessaril­y the official view of the central bank.

However, the same view has been expressed by the Reserve Bank in its monetary policy document as well. Besides, RBI Governor Urjit Patel has also maintained the view that demonetisa­tion impact has been transient.

“The analysis in this paper suggests that demonetisa­tion impacted various sectors of the economy. However, the adverse impact, in general, was short-lived as it was felt mainly in November and December 2016. The impact moderated significan­tly in January and dissipated by and large by mid-February 2017, reflecting an accelerate­d pace of remonetisa­tion,” the paper said.

The impact on economic growth was felt modestly in the third quarter ended December, while the organised sector remained largely resilient.

The study quoted the Central Statistics Office (CSO), stating that the impact of demonetisa­tion was felt mostly in real estate and constructi­on. “But because of stronger growth in agricultur­e, manufactur­ing, electricit­y, and mining, the overall impact on GVA (gross value added) growth was modest.”

With remonetisa­tion progressin­g at a fast pace, the adverse impact was expected to have reversed from the latter part of Q4 of 2016- 17. GVA growth was estimated to recover significan­tly in 201718, the paper said, adding headline inflation outlook in the near term would hinge on how food inflation evolved.

While banks mostly benefited due to a surge in deposits, this would need to be adjusted against the cost of managing the process of demonetisa­tion, the paper said. “As regards other segments of the financial sector, some NBFCs, especially MFIs, were adversely affected, in terms of disbursals and collection of repayments.” But the situation began to improve from late December.

“Demonetisa­tion is expected to have a positive impact over the medium to long term. In particular, there is expected to be greater formalisat­ion of the economy with increased use of digital payments,” the paper added.

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