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Modi cash ban a ‘total failure’ as 99% of banned notes back

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MUMBAI: Indians have deposited nearly all the currency bills voided by Prime Minister Narendra Modi, denting the central bank’s profit and dealing a blow to his drive to unearth unaccounte­d wealth.

Banks have received 15.28 trillion rupees (US$239bil), or 99% of the currency invalidate­d, the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) said in its annual report on Wednesday. The government had initially estimated about 5 trillion rupees wouldn’t be declared following the sudden move on Nov 9, indicating that this was cash stashed away illegally to avoid tax. The cash ban prompted the central bank to print new currency, reducing its profit and cutting annual dividend payout to the government by half.

“This data proves that demonetisa­tion was a total failure,” said Mohan Guruswamy, chairman of New Delhi-based Centre For Policy Alternativ­es, who’d advised a previous government led by the current ruling party. “The prime minister obviously had overstated his case. You’ve lost so many jobs across sectors. How can people trust Modi and his numbers?”

Supporters of the cash ban saw the action as a battle against the rich who salt away their wealth without paying taxes. Modi’s party had a landslide victory in a key state soon after the move to ban 86% of the nation’s cash, though subsequent data show that the economic shock has slowed growth and investment in Asia’s No. 3 economy.

A raft of economic data since the note ban decision have signalled that US$2 trillion economy was hurt by the cash clampdown, raising fears that the economic growth would stall. Growth in the quarter ended March 2017 slowed to 6.1% from a year earlier. It expanded 7% pace in the previous quarter. Gross domestic product data for April-June due at 5:30 pm in New Delhi yesterday will help assess the lingering impact of the cash ban or whether it had faded.

Electronic payments have risen 21% since November to 113.7 trillion rupees in July, though they dipped from its peak of 150 trillion rupees in March, central bank data show.

While some economists blame Modi for the economic slowdown, he politicall­y gained by winning elections in Uttar Pradesh, the country’s most populous state, as rural poor supported the move with a belief that his actions would even out the scale of inequality and reduce corruption.

The fact that the bulk of the banned notes have been returned “shows that the banking system and the RBI were able to effectivel­y respond to the challenge of collecting such a large number” of notes in a limited time, the Finance Ministry said in a statement on Wednesday. It touted an increase in tax payers and an “almost entire” stop to terror funding following the cash ban as examples of its success.

“Some people had expected a very large shock to economic growth on account of demonetisa­tion,” the statement read. “Their expectatio­ns have been belied.”

Opposition parties were quick to blame the government and the central bank for the demonetisa­tion drive. The RBI lost more money on printing notes compared to the bills that were permanentl­y former Finance Minister Chidambara­m said.

“The economists deserve Nobel Chidambara­m said on a Twitter post.

The bank spent 79.65 billion rupees to create new cash in the year through June 30, it said in its annual report published Wednesday. That was the highest in at least 17 years and extinguish­ed, Palaniappa­n Prize,” compares with 34.21 billion rupees and 37.6 billion rupees for the previous two years.

Higher costs ate into profits, compelling the monetary authority to cut its dividend to the government. The smaller payout imperils India’s budget deficit target, because Modi boosted spending to compensate for a drop in private investment and consumptio­n following the cash ban shock. — Bloomberg

 ??  ?? Back to the bank: Protestors holding placards of banned 500 and 1000 rupee notes in Mumbai. The bulk of banned notes have been returned to the Indian central bank. — AFP
Back to the bank: Protestors holding placards of banned 500 and 1000 rupee notes in Mumbai. The bulk of banned notes have been returned to the Indian central bank. — AFP

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