The Star Malaysia - StarBiz

Indian currency decree does little to root out ‘black money’

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NEW DELHI: Nearly all of the currency removed from circulatio­n in a surprise 2016 attempt to root out illegal hoards of cash came back into the financial system, India’s reserve bank has announced, indicating the move did little to slow the undergroun­d economy.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s currency decree, which was designed to destroy the value of billions of dollars in untaxed cash stockpiles, caused an economic slowdown and months of financial chaos for tens of millions of people.

Modi announced in a November 2016 TV address that all 500-rupee and 1,000-rupee notes, then worth about US$7.50 and US$15, would be withdrawn immediatel­y from cir- culation. The banned notes could be deposited into bank accounts but the government also said it would investigat­e deposits over 250,000 rupees, or about US$3,700. The government eventually released new currency notes worth 500 and 2,000 rupees.

In theory, the decree meant corrupt politician­s and businesspe­ople would suddenly find themselves sitting on billions of dollars in worthless currency, known here as “black money.”

“A few people are spreading corruption for their own benefit,” Modi said in the surprise nighttime speech announceme­nt of the order. “There is a time when you realise that you have to bring some change in society, and this is our time.”

But even as the decree caused turmoil for those in India who have always depended on cash – the poor and middle class, and millions of small traders – the rich found ways around the currency switch.

In the months after the decree, businesspe­ople said that even large amounts of banned currency notes could be traded on the black market, though middlemen charged heavy fees.

The reserve bank report said in its Wednesday report that 99.3% of the US$217 billion in notes withdrawn from circulatio­n had come back into the economy. Some officials had originally predicted that number could be as low as 60%.

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