Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

Economic benefits of digital economy

- BY DINESH WEERAKKODY

The digital economy that results from billions of everyday online connection­s among people, businesses and devices, has greatly changed our economic environmen­t in relation to how the government and businesses operate and provide goods and services.

Prosperity in the new economy involves more than capitalisi­ng on knowledge assets. Prosperity involves increasing employment in those industries that are growing. Digital payments, digital data, digital customer service, payments through new platforms, along with real-time analytics are becoming entrenched in the world economy.

Digital transforma­tions facing large companies are beyond typical planning cycles and most CEO tenures. This makes good timing absolutely critical when it comes to allocating resources effectivel­y. These elements will forever change consumptio­n because of the effort of many of the government­s to push fast towards a cashless economy to keep transactio­n cost down.

Some time back, India in an effort to move to a digital economy and combat corruption, tax evasion and counterfei­ting, all 500 and 1,000 rupee banknotes were withdrawn from circulatio­n. Many internatio­nal bankers argue that India failed miserably in their demonetisa­tion effort.

The Modi government publicly declared their demonetisa­tion objectives saying that that the government wanted to transform the economy into a digital economy. We know we can’t completely transform an economy to a digital economy over night.

There are various social classes; for example, a waiter or a steward receive tips, a household worker gets some extra money for a job welldone, parliament­arians get political funds, even some profession­als have foundation­s to book their donations and sales from books. Parliament­arians or politician­s have their own foundation­s establishe­d to get donations. They use the money to uplift certain communitie­s and to look into the welfare of them.

If you take an establishm­ent such as the Roman Catholic Church, it has over US $ 60 billion in real estate assets around the globe in the name of the church.

Black money

In the Indian demonetisa­tion effort, if the real objective was to attack the ‘black money’ stored by the political and business elite, around 90 percent of the demonetise­d notes were returned to the banks, far more than the government expected.

As the Guardian explained with its sense of British understate­ment, this means “either the Indians concealed less wealth from taxation than was thought or that money has been preserved in the form of goods or gold, rather than cash”.

In fact, according to economists, very probably, less than 3 percent of ‘black money’ is held in currency. In an Indian context, it is still big money. Almost all of it is either converted into gold (it is said India has by far the largest private gold reserves in the world) or put into purchases of jewellery, real estate or land, when it isn’t put into financial investment­s.

And then when all that money goes into their bank accounts or other establishm­ents, that money too comes to the so-called ‘white system’... gambling (casinos) is said to be one of the world’s biggest industries that creates wealth among various social classes and there are gambling moguls around the world who own banks, finance companies, real estate.

Even in the USA, there are poker players who become rich overnight and then their wealth is transferre­d into various other establishm­ents when they start using that money. One such example is a spa owner. Their extra earnings are transforme­d to various other business establishm­ents when they purchase goods and services.

Opportunit­y for SMES

A full digital economy can drive away lots of people and perhaps increase poverty if digital transforma­tion is done by creating limitation­s and wealth limits. Many people faced identity theft as a result of the transforma­tion.

India being the world’s largest democracy has the most businesssa­vvy politician­s but even they are people who transform wealth to various other business, religious and social establishm­ents.

Several top economists have said globally that what India did was a failure and it only hugely troubled the poor families and specially older people’s savings.

India is the largest gold consumer and India’s activity in impacting global gold prices took a different turn because of the demonetisa­tion. It enabled the digital currencies such as bitcoin to overtake the gold price in internatio­nal markets.

If you take bitcoin, people trade in those digital currencies and their capital gains are transforme­d to other asset classes, resulting in the real economy losing. Banks and companies therefore will need to work with each other to promote digital payments. They can help many small SMES to migrate to digital payments and to use stockkeepi­ng data over the cloud. This can enable SMES to raise more working capital loans from banks.

Every businessma­n has a smartphone and therefore, we only need smart leaders who understand the payoffs to proliferat­e this idea and help SMES to access easy capital and know-how.

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