The National - News

India demonetisa­tion figures deal blow to Modi government

- SAMANTH SUBRAMANIA­N

New figures from India’s central bank reveal that 99 per cent of the high-value currency notes declared invalid during last year’s demonetisa­tion drive were successful­ly deposited back into the banking system.

The statistics come as a blow to prime minister Narendra Modi and his Bharatiya Janata Party, which had hoped demonetisa­tion would punish Indians with undeclared stashes of cash known as “black money”.

The rationale behind the drive was that such stashes would become suddenly worthless, and anyone holding large sums of cash would be unable to deposit it in banks without filing a tax declaratio­n about the source of the income – something that people whose cash had been earned from illegitima­te sources would be reluctant to do.

As a result, the government predicted that a significan­t proportion of 500- (Dh28.6) and 1,000-rupee notes would not return to the banking system at all. As many as a third of currency notes in these denominati­ons were part of black money stashes, government officials suggested.

But in its annual report, released on Wednesday, the reserve bank of India said 15.28 trillion rupees’ worth of 500and 1,000-rupee banknotes, out of a total circulatin­g value of 15.44tn rupees, had flowed back into bank accounts.

On Wednesday, finance minister Arun Jaitley insisted that curbing black money had not been the main objective of the demonetisa­tion drive. But that ran counter to remarks Mr Modi made when announcing the demonetisa­tion initiative in November. The intent of the drive, he said, was “to break the grip of corruption and black money”.

Mr Jaitley, however, said demonetisa­tion had other goals: increasing electronic transactio­ns, pulling more people into the formal banking system by encouragin­g them to open accounts and crippling terrorists by cutting their access to cash.

He also said the high percentage of returned currency did not in itself indicate that black money offenders had escaped.

“The fact that money has got into the banking system does not mean that it is all now legitimate,” he said. “The money got identified with the owner who was then fixed with the liability of explaining that money and facing taxation on it.”

Mr Jaitley said the government was examining 1.8 million bank accounts in which suspicious deposits worth 3 to 4 trillion rupees were made. Taxes levied on these deposits, at a rate of 50 to 90 per cent depending on how much money had gone undeclared, could net the government 2 to 3 trillion rupees, a significan­t sum given that tax revenues last year were 17.1 trillion rupees.

In theory, Mr Jaitley has a point, said John Raja, the founder of How India Lives, a company that analyses public data.

But, he said: “The question is – has the government, in the past, shown the capability to crunch this kind of data and to go after suspicious transactio­ns to retrieve tax?

“The answer is no.”

Even most of the deposits under review, Mr Raja said, were likely to be explained adequately by account holders.

“India is a cash economy, and there was no law on keeping your savings as cash.”

After review, he said, it may well transpire that taxes had already been paid on these deposits, or that the money was not liable to be taxed at all.

The process of serving notices for people to pay tax on deposits and working through responses and adjudicati­on is a lengthy one. As a result, it is not entirely clear when the tax receipts from these deposits will be reflected in the government’s published tax revenue figures.

C Rammanohar Reddy, an economist, said the government’s reckoning was off in other ways as well.

“Black money held in the form of cash is a very small proportion of total illegal wealth,” Mr Reddy said. “And those who do hold stocks of cash are powerful enough to launder it and recycle it in different ways into the banking system. That is what has happened.”

The publicatio­n of the RBI report has, however, given ammunition to Mr Modi’s critics, particular­ly since demonetisa­tion imposed severe hardships on most Indians.

Between January and March, India’s economic growth slumped to 6.1 per cent, lower than the target of 7.1 per cent and the 7.6 per cent growth during the same period the previous year. The slump has been attributed by several economists to the cash crunch.

Responding to the report on Twitter, Rahul Gandhi, the vice-president of the opposition Congress party, called demonetisa­tion “a colossal failure which cost innocent lives and ruined the economy”.

The RBI said 15.28tn out of 15.44tn rupees in 500- and 1,000-rupee banknotes flowed back into bank accounts

 ?? AFP ?? People wait to exchange demonitise­d currency in Bengaluru in January. A slump in the economy has been blamed on the drive
AFP People wait to exchange demonitise­d currency in Bengaluru in January. A slump in the economy has been blamed on the drive

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