Hindustan Times (Amritsar)

Oppn, govt trade blows on demonetisa­tion effect

- HT Correspond­ent letters@hindustant­imes.com

NEWDELHI: On the second anniversar­y of the invalidati­on of highvalue currency notes, finance minister Arun Jaitley rose to the defence of the National Democratic Alliance (NDA) government on Thursday in the face of a barrage of criticism by Opposition leaders, including former prime minister Mahmohan Singh who said the scars on the economy were becoming more visible, and Congress president Rahul Gandhi who called it a “day of infamy.”

Jaitley, in a blog post, wrote that the ban on old ~500 and ~1,000 notes was needed to shake up the system and move India from cash to digital transactio­ns.

“An ill-informed criticism of demonetisa­tion is that almost the entire cash money got deposited in the banks. Confiscati­on of currency was not an objective of demonetisa­tion,” Jaitley said in the post that coincides with protests planned by the Congress to mark the anniversar­y.

Late in evening on November 8, 2016, Prime Minister Narendra Modi announced that old ~500 and ~1,000 banknotes would cease to be legal tender from midnight the same day, rendering worthless 86% of the currency in circulatio­n by value. The move, aimed at unearthing untaxed income, weeding out fake currency and curbing terrorist finance, led to a cash crunch that lasted months.

Jaitley said moving money into the formal economy and making the holders pay tax was the broader objective of the note ban, noting that the number of income tax return filers had

› By the time the first five years of this government are over, we will be close to doubling the (tax) assessee base ARUN JAITLEY, finance minister

increased from 38 million when the NDA came to power in May 2014 to 68.6 million four years later. “By the time the first five years of this government are over, we will be close to doubling the (tax) assessee base,” he said, attributin­g the sharp increase to the note ban.

“Despite an annual income tax relief of ~97,000 crore given to the smaller tax payers and a ~80,000 crore relief given to the GST (goods and services tax) assesses, tax collection­s have gone up. Rates of taxes, both direct and indirect have been reduced, but tax collection­s have gone up. The tax base has been expanded. GST rates on 334 commoditie­s which were paying an effective 31% tax pre-GST have witnessed a tax reduction,” Jaitley wrote, summing up the end result of the note ban as “more formalisat­ion, more revenue, more resources for the poor, better Infrastruc­ture, and a better quality of life for our citizens.”

The ruling Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) posed a list of questions to the Congress to answer, challengin­g it to cite even one step taken by the previous United Progressiv­e Alliance (UPA) government to eliminate corruption and black money or benefit small businesses, why it chose to defame India and create an atmosphere of gloom, why it was unhappy with global recognitio­n of India’s economic prowess, and why it opposed formalisat­ion of the economy.

The offensive came in the face of trenchant criticism of demonetisa­tion, which Gandhi termed a “tragedy.”

“India has faced many tragedies in its past. Many a time have envious, external enemies tried to hurt us. But demonetisa­tion is unique in the history of our tragedies because it was a self-inflicted, suicidal attack that destroyed millions of lives and ruined thousands of India’s small businesses. The worst hit by demonetisa­tion were the poorest of the poor,” Rahul said.

› ... demonetisa­tion is unique in the history of our tragedies because it was a selfinflic­ted, suicidal attack

RAHUL GANDHI, Congress president

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