Millennium Post

Demonetisa­tion blues hit homes

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The joke said it all, it seemed: “At the stroke of the midnight, as the world sleeps, the corrupt in India wake up to bankruptcy.” It appeared to encapsulat­e in so few words so much of the motivation of Prime Minister Narendra Modi's government in demonetisi­ng the big denominati­on currency notes. In one fell swoop, he also pulled out of circulatio­n many thousand crores that have been pumped into the economy from across the internatio­nal border in the west. But then cautious consternat­ion struck home. How about tomorrow? How will households buy their groceries? How will the vegetable vendor buy their supplies to sell to those who want it delivered at their doorstep? Where is the infrastruc­ture to replace the now ubiquitous Rs 500 notes – considerin­g the eroded value of the rupee due to inflation- that was earlier less seen. Yet, better sense told us that this was only a problem for a week or a fortnight. The small guy will be troubled only for a few days. On the other hand, the modernisat­ion of the monetary system that this demonetisa­tion can bring in – by making plastic money or a cellphone applicatio­n-based payment procedure easy – will save the small guy from having to pay

rangdari tax, let's say, both to the police and the local goons. In the long term, though we will all be dead, to paraphrase JM Keynes, still this modernisin­g influence will get the GST kick in well and faster, and the collection will also be higher. That should, in turn, expand the welfare rupee. All those are the pluses. In fact, today's Delhi roads were a testimony to a policy that is making Narendra Modi of a land-grabbing Gujarat government seem "socialist," for missing were Mercedes Benz or he BMWS or the Porsches of even the Audi SUVS (these, of course, are available in the typically middle-class EMI system). So as the crass preening of the rich and wealthy (though no one really knows how in Delhi that has few industries or other commercial ventures create so much wealth!) appeared missing, the city felt like home. As my mother tells me, we journalist­s can't do the good over evil. Even this move has its bad side: a lot of the money to be spent in the Legislativ­e Assembly polls next year will be missing as the non-bjp parties were taken by surprise even as they readying their stash for UP, Uttarakhan­d and all the other states. In fact, if we learn to believe our government even Amit Shah could have been taken by surprise by the move his loving mentor had made. So will the next few polls see the evil of money powerless, concurrent­ly the muscle power too? Doubtful. For tomorrow is another day for MK Gandhi, to re-emerge on the one face of the new Rs 500 note and even better, new Rs 2000 notes. If I were Narendra Modi, I would have waited for a month or so to have the Adanis and Ambanis stew in their juices a little longer, before throwing them their lifeline. Their names are only exemplary and in no way restricted. But a vegetable vendor probably has some cash to pick up his stock tomorrow. Otherwise, he and we are in trouble.

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