The Sunday Guardian

Hasmukh Adhia prefers spirituali­ty over becoming next CEC

The top bureaucrat, who is credited with implementi­ng demonetisa­tion and GST, retires on 30 November.

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Speculatio­n is rife that Finance and Revenue Secretary Hasmukh Adhia, who on Saturday announced that he would retire on 30 November, was tipped to be given a suitable placement post his retirement.

Sources said that Adhia, a 1981-batch Gujarat-cadre IAS officer who is credited with “successful­ly” implementi­ng demonetisa­tion and GST in the country, was considered to be appointed as the next Chief Election Commission­er ( CEC) in place of the incumbent O.P. Rawat whose tenure ends on 2 December.

Others, however, said that he was in no mood to take up any responsibi­lity after retirement. He was appointed as the Finance Secretary in November 2017 while he was working as the Revenue Secretary at the Centre.

Adhia, who turned 60 earlier this month, worked in the Finance Ministry for four years including the last three years as Revenue Secretary. His tenure in the dual position was marked with unparallel­ed developmen­ts like demonetisa­tion, a process which was executed by a small team led by him, with economic experts questionin­g the execution of the whole process which affected the lives of millions of Indians and has allegedly led to an economic slowdown.

According to independen­t experts, Adhia and his team were unprepared for rolling out the massive exercise when 86% of the currency notes were declared invalid.

The implementa­tion of Goods and Services Tax (GST), despite the Finance Ministry stating that it was “well-prepared” for it, too has come under a lot of criticism from independen­t experts for the glitches and shortfalls that it is still facing.

Earlier in June this year, Adhia again became the centre of controvers­y when he was accused by Rajeshwar Singh, an Enforcemen­t Directorat­e (ED) officer of joint director rank, of “siding with scamsters and their affiliates” and helping former Finance Minister P. Chidamabra­m. However, Singh later withdrew the letter and apologised for the outbursts.

Commenting on Adhia’s retirement in a Facebook post, his boss and Finance Minister Arun Jaitley revealed that the government wanted him to continue in some “alternate” capacity but he declined the offer. “He had informed me earlier this year that he would not work for a single day after November 30. His time thereafter belongs to his favourite passion (spirituali­ty and yoga) and of course his son,” Jaitley said in the post.

 ??  ?? Sanjay Bhandari
Sanjay Bhandari

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