The Asian Age

Note ban not enough to stop stash buildup

Take more steps to counter undeclared assets: UN

- AGE CORRESPOND­ENT

Demonetisa­tion, announced by Prime minister Narendra Modi on November 8, did not impede future black money flows in new denominati­ons and complement­ary measures would be required to target all forms of undeclared wealth and assets, said a UN body.

“The measure did not, by itself, impede future black money flows in new denominati­ons,” said United Nation’s ‘Economic and Social Survey of Asia and the Pacific 2017’ said.

It said that while estimates of the size of the black economy vary at about 20-25 per cent of GDP, cash is estimated to make up only about 10 per cent of that value.

“Thus, complement­ary measures would be required to target all forms of undeclared wealth and assets,” said the report. It pointed out that broader structural reforms which could also contribute to enhanced transparen­cy include: the implementa­tion of GST; voluntary disclosure of income scheme; and tracking of highvalue transactio­ns through taxpayer identifica­tion numbers,” said the report.

Other measures, such as reforming the real estate registrati­on process to ensure transparen­cy, are being discussed, it said.

However, the report said that a more permanent increase in digitalena­bled and non-cashbased transactio­ns is likely, driven by awareness of cash-alternativ­e solutions during the demonetisa­tion exercise and strong government advocacy and incentives.

But, it said that digital payments are not a daily tool of most people in India, accounting for only 20 per cent of total transactio­ns and 5 per cent of personal consumptio­n expenditur­e.

“Moving towards a cashless economy will require addressing household determinan­ts of cash dependence beyond technology adoption, including low financial inclusion, high informalit­y, persistent gender inequality in access to finance, low financial literacy, low ICT infrastruc­ture and large gaps in energy access,” said the report.

“In the medium-term, the currency initiative is expected to bring more economic activities into the formal sector and spur digitisati­on of financial transactio­ns, helping to broaden the tax base and secure the fiscal space needed for public social and infrastruc­ture expenditur­es.”

In India, there were only 33.1 million effective taxpayers in 2014/15 for a population of more than 1.2 billion people. “The one-off currency measure in effect transferre­d lost black money to the government through unclaimed or unexchange­d notes. Preliminar­y estimates suggested a 97 per cent recovery of notes, which would imply a 3.16 per cent increase in fiscal revenues for the government,” said the report.

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