Arab News

India’s former central bank chief had cautioned government on demonetiza­tion

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MUMBAI: India’s former central bank head Raghuram Rajan had cautioned the government that short-term costs of a radical ban of highvalue currency notes would outweigh the long-term benefits, Times of India newspaper reported on Sunday.

He had first given his opinion on whether to carry out the ban in February 2016, the paper reported, citing excerpts from Rajan’s book on his stint at the Reserve Bank of India (RBI), titled “I Do What I Do: On Reforms Rhetoric and Resolve.”

That was months before Prime Minister Narendra Modi stunned the country on Nov. 8 by abolishing 500- and 1,000rupee notes, removing 86 percent of the currency in circulatio­n in a bid to crack down on the “shadow economy.”

“The RBI flagged what would happen if preparatio­n was inadequate,” the paper cited Rajan as saying in the book that will be released next week.

Rajan also told the newspaper in an interview that the demonetiza­tion had a disruptive impact on the economy.

“I think all said and done, it would be fair to say the intent was good. But certainly at this point, one still cannot in any way say it has been an economic success. But again, as I said, only time will tell,” he was quoted as saying.

Indians returned most of the estimated 15.4 trillion rupees ($242 billion) in high-currency bills removed from circulatio­n last year, the RBI said in its annual report on Wednesday.

Modi had been intending to make it difficult for hoarders of undeclared wealth to exchange their undeclared cash for legal tender, but it seems most of it was returned by individual­s, implying there was a very small amount of unaccounte­d money held in cash or evaders had managed to legalize their unaccounte­d money.

While Modi’s drive to unearth unaccounte­d wealth did not deliver the desired result, it hurt consumer demand in a country where most people are paid in, and buy what they need with, cash.

India’s economy lost further steam in the quarter to June as growth slid to 5.7 percent, its lowest level in more than three years and a marked slowdown from a 6.1 percent growth rate in the January-March period.

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