Business Standard

CASH-TO-GDP RATIO MAY HIT 15%, HIGHEST SINCE 1947

Four years after demonetisa­tion, India once again a predominan­tly cash economy

- ABHISHEK WAGHMARE Pune, 6 October

Four years ago, on November 8, when high-value currency notes (~500 and ~1,000), which accounted for 86 per cent of the Indian currency in circulatio­n, were demonetise­d, one of the aims was to propel the population towards digital modes of payment. Data, however, shows that India has once again become a predominan­tly cash economy — with currency in the hands of the public crossing ~26 trillion in midSeptemb­er. With respect to the size of the economy, the cash-to-gross domestic product (GDP) ratio is now likely highest since Independen­ce.

If we assume that India’s nominal GDP contracts by 10 per cent this year, the currency with public would rise to about 15 per cent of the GDP, a Business Standard calculatio­n shows.

In 2016, when Prime Minister Narendra Modi scrapped high-value notes, only to introduce new ones, cash was at ~17 trillion. It had grown 60 per cent in four years from 2012 to 2016. In four years after the disruptive move, cash has grown 53 per cent, at nearly the same rate.

But payments, too, are getting digitised faster than ever.

It is a classic case of extremes: The worst contractio­n in GDP along with the highest-ever levels of cash in the economy; and a severe dent in consumptio­n together with strong growth in bank deposits and digital payments.

The drop in consumptio­n has created a pool of money that is “unusable”, says a senior banker who requested not to be named. “Even though salaries have been cut, there has been virtually no expense on restaurant­s, travel (petrol and diesel), entertainm­ent, clothes, or even (buying of ) house at the top end. This unused money is getting reflected in a high cash-to-gdp ratio,” he explains.

Experts say this is expected when the economy is facing an unpreceden­ted contractio­n. But evidence, as of yet, does not point to hoarding of cash by individual­s. However, household financial savings in the form of currency are slowly rising due to pandemic uncertaint­y, economists have noted.

The year-on-year growth in currency with the public touched 24 per cent towards the end of August and the beginning of September — much faster than the 10-15 per cent growth in most of FY20.

Similarly, deposits with banks are growing faster than before, and also faster than growth in credit disbursal. In a tricky situation, the economy is flush with cash which people are spending (or investing) sparingly.

Apart from savings by way of low retail spending, measures taken by the Reserve Bank of India to maintain adequate liquidity in the banking system are also a reason.

“An important point is: How does the RBI decide to increase currency in circulatio­n. Is it in response to demand from regional centres as consumers demand more cash through withdrawal­s? If that is the case, then the rise in currency in circulatio­n will represent people’s cash hoarding preference­s,” Parag Waknis, who teaches economics at Ambedkar University in Delhi, tells Business Standard. “The current rise in currency with public could represent both people's demand for liquidity and RBI'S decision to keep liquidity adequate,” he says.

Currency patterns are associated with festivals, sowing and procuremen­t of farm produce, according to an RBI paper. The jump in cash in FY21 could partly be due to this, since the festive season has begun.

An article by RBI economists had noted in June that Covid-19-related uncertaint­ies have resulted in an outflow from savings instrument­s, such as mutual funds, and a flight to currency holdings. Currency occupies a considerab­le 13-14 per cent of outstandin­g household financial savings (March 2020). Economists have underlined this as representa­tive of risk aversion and spending aversion.

Soumya Kanti Ghosh, chief economist at the State Bank of India, says private consumptio­n — the driver of India’s economy — is at play here. “We are seeing a faster-than-expected dent in consumptio­n in the coming quarters too. The festive season always gives hope, but with activity reduced to the essential and low-contact businesses, uncertaint­y looms large,” he says.

Along with the drop in consumptio­n and the associated rise in cash, the economy is also witnessing a healthy rise in digital payments. The number of users of Unified Payments Interface, or UPI, has nearly doubled in less than a year.

The value of UPI transactio­ns, on apps such as BHIM, Phonepe or Google Pay, was ~1.9 trillion in November 2019. It touched ~3.3 trillion in September 2020.

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