Hindustan Times (Bathinda)

DIGITISATI­ON IS THE SUCCESS STORY OF DEMONETISA­TION

- RUPA SUBRAMANYA

O n the first year anniversar­y of demonetisa­tion, it’s important to ask if it accomplish­ed its stated objectives. While it appears that the objectives of rooting out black money as announced by Prime Minister Narendra Modi on November 8, 2016, have not been realised, given that almost all of the ₹15 lakh-crore of high value notes in circulatio­n were returned, is there credible evidence that another goal, which was articulate­d in the weeks following the announceme­nt, has been achieved?

Has the goal of digitisati­on and moving away from cash achieved?

Unfortunat­ely, much of the analysis has been simplistic and misleading­ly compares two data points before and after demonetisa­tion. For the past year, I’ve been developing and updating a statistica­l model calithe brated to Reserve Bank of India data, which tracks the evolution of digital payments with data going back to 2011 and right up to the latest available, August 2017.

As articulate­d in a pair of research reports for Observer Research Foundation, a Delhi based think-tank, the model clearly shows that several key components of digital payments such as Point of Sale Debit and Credit (PoS) purchases, National Electronic Fund Transfer (NEFT), Immediate Payment Systems (IMPS) and mobile banking, are way above their pre-demonetisa­tion trends. The model itself is based on positing a relationsh­ip between various digital payment modes and the total supply of money in the system, a standard approach in monetary economics. Clearly demonetisa­tion disrupted the equilibriu­m the economy was settling into and pushed it away from cash toward digitisati­on.

A simple eyeballing of the data tells a similar tale. A plot of currency in circulatio­n as a ratio of broad money stock (M3; this includes more than physical money, currency and coins – bank deposits, mutual fund holdings, securities) clearly shows a big drop in immediate aftermath of demonetisa­tion and the slow increase thereafter, exactly as you would expect given that the liquidity crunch caused by the shortage of high-value notes slowly disappeare­d as the new notes came into wider circulatio­n. But crucially, cash over M3 is settling into a new lower equilibriu­m than before: From 14% to 12%. That means one thing: less cash.

Likewise, the data show a similar permanent increase in key components of digitisati­on.

For instance, the PoS which had stabilised around 3% of broad money stock has now jumped up to 6%, while NEFT is above 10% and IMPS is above 0.5%, starting from a base of zero a few years ago. The model does not track Unified Payments Interface (UPI) both as it’s very new and therefore its behaviour is dominated by a natural upward trend starting from zero making it hard to disentangl­e the effects of demonetisa­tion.

Mobile banking reached an impressive high point of a little above 1% of broad money stock in May before falling back slightly the next month to just under 1%. Note that data starting July, which shows a big drop in mobile banking, is misleading and not comparable as the RBI explains it does not include corporate transactio­ns.

This raises the question: Is the jump in mobile banking largely driven by the corporate rather than the personal side?

If so, this underlines the imperative for the government to continue its drive to nudge individual­s towards digital and away from cash transactio­ns. Apart from habit, technologi­cal limitation­s and poor mobile connectivi­ty are a natural deterrent to switching from cash to mobile. For example, a single failed transactio­n which ties up a large amount of money for a long time could well put people off mobile banking.

The bottom line of the research conclusive­ly demonstrat­es that there was a structural break after November 2016 with a permanent increase in digital payments and decrease in the relative importance of cash. Whatever you may think of the original goals and whether they succeeded, it’s clear digitisati­on is one demonstrab­le success story of demonetisa­tion.

Rupa Subramanya is an economist and author based in Mumbai The views expressed are personal

RESEARCH DATA SHOWS THAT THERE WAS A STRUCTURAL BREAK AFTER NOVEMBER 8, 2016, WITH AN INCREASE IN DIGITAL PAYMENTS AND DECREASE IN THE RELATIVE IMPORTANCE OF CASH

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