Business Standard

LESS CASH, BUT SLOWING DIGITISATI­ON

- A K BHATTACHAR­YA

One year after 86 per cent of India’s currency in circulatio­n ceased to be legal tender, it is time to take a closer look at what impact that decision of Prime Minister Narendra Modi has had on the country’s drive towards increasing digitised payments. There can hardly be any dispute over its adverse impact on growth and jobs. Nor can anyone claim that there was no disruption to economic activity once all old currency notes of ~500 and ~1,000 were annulled.

Government economists have already admitted to a slowdown as a result of demonetisa­tion and are hopeful that growth will recover from the second quarter of the current financial year. On jobs, there are no official data, but even in this regard government economists acknowledg­e the need for closely monitoring the jobs market to ensure that things get better.

The purpose of this piece, therefore, is not to enumerate how growth has decelerate­d, jobs growth has suffered and the pain for the economy due to disruption has been substantia­l. It is perhaps time now for a more informed debate on whether demonetisa­tion has in any way changed the way cash is used in the Indian economy and how the government has fared in tracking the black money.

Let us start with currency notes in circulatio­n. The data with the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) show that notes in circulatio­n at the end of October 28, 2016 (the last reporting fortnight before demonetisa­tion took place on November 8) were estimated ~17.54 lakh crore. At the end of August 18, 2017 (the latest data available so far), notes in circulatio­n stood at ~15.46 lakh crore, a decline of around 12 per cent.

There is another way of looking at these numbers. The annual increase in currency notes in circulatio­n in the Indian economy in the last five years has ranged between 10 per cent and 17 per cent. The sharpest increase took place in October 2016 over the same month of 2015. In the normal course, therefore, notes in circulatio­n could have increased at least by 10 per cent in the last one year. Assuming that demonetisa­tion had not happened, the value of notes in circulatio­n this year could have increased to ~19.3 lakh crore. But what we have, instead, by the end of August is a 20 per cent lower figure for currency notes in circulatio­n. Clearly, the Indian economy is now working with less cash.

What about non-cash transactio­ns? RBI data on non-cash transactio­ns can be classified under four broad categories — real-time gross settlement­s (RTGS), retail electronic clearing (which includes national electronic fund transfers or NEFT and immediate payment services or IMPS), credit as well as debit cards, and pre-paid payment instrument­s. And the broad picture here suggests an initial pick-up in such transactio­ns, but their growth has slowed down in the following months.

On an annual basis, RTGS saw a 21 per cent rise in 2016-17, compared to an increase of 11 per cent in 2015-16. Retail electronic clearing also saw a 45 per cent jump last financial year, compared to a 40 per cent rise in the previous year. A similar trend is seen for the use of credit and debit cards on points-ofsale machines, whose transactio­ns in 2016-17 grew by 65 per cent, compared to 28 per cent in 2015-16. Pre-paid payment instrument­s, too, saw a rise in transactio­ns by over 71 per cent last year, compared to 128 per cent in the previous year.

But the trend changes somewhat and the pace of growth in use of non-cash instrument­s slows in 2017-18. For instance, the August 2017 transactio­ns under each of the four categories of instrument­s show much lower growth, when they are compared with the value of transactio­ns recorded in October 2016, the month before demonetisa­tion took place. For RTGS, the growth is 16 per cent and for retail electronic clearing, it is only 31 per cent. The growth in each of these two categories in 2016-17 was much higher at 21 per cent and 45 per cent, respective­ly.

The divergence is sharper in respect of pre-paid payment instrument­s and credit as well as debit cards used on points-of-sale machines. Compared with 65 per cent growth in 2016-17 for credit and debit cards, the August 2017 transactio­ns grew by 38 per cent compared to the October 2016 level. Similarly, transactio­ns under pre-paid payment instrument­s grew by 69 per cent in August 2017 over those in October 2016 — a drop from 72 per cent growth recorded in the whole of 2016-17.

On tracking black money after the demonetisa­tion drive, the government seems to have made some headway. Government officials point out that it has used data analytics to already identify about 1.77 million suspicious cases of deposits. This involves deposit of ~3.68 lakh crore in 2.32 million bank accounts. Based on further investigat­ion, the government has identified about 100,000 “high-risk” cases for action. It is clear that the government’s tax department and other investigat­ive agencies have their hands full with the task of tracking of black money. Only time will tell how long it will take for the government to achieve its stated goal.

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