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Demonetisation: Has it delivered?

The success that Narendra Modi and BJP have tasted in the recent state elections reveal people's support for the withdrawal of high denomination notes but the jury is still out on its efficacy.

March 26, 2017 / 12:08 IST
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N Madhavan  Forbes India

The state assembly elections in Uttar Pradesh (UP), Uttarakhand, Goa, Punjab and Manipur were the first real test to understand what people thought of demonetisation. Modi’s critics were hoping that people would teach him and his party (BJP) a good lesson for all the troubles they were put through to access their own money. But they were in for a rude shock. BJP swept the polls in UP and Uttarakhand while managing to form the government in Goa and Manipur. People, it became clear, wholeheartedly supported Modi’s move to fight black money.

People’s support notwithstanding, is demonetisation a success? To answer that question, one has to look at the five broad objectives the move purported to achieve:
• Destroy black money in the system
• End counterfeit currency menace
• Widen the tax base
• Move to a less cash economy
• Generate higher tax revenues (and consequently lead to a lower tax rate regime)

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Analysing how the exercise fared under each of these objectives will give some indication of its efficacy.

Destroy black money in the system: According to the data from Reserve Bank of India and the government, 4.5 lakh crore currency notes were withdrawn from circulation on November 8. The expectation was that not all of them will return to the banking system and get exchanged (after all, people with unaccounted cash will not deposit their money for the fear of being questioned by tax authorities). It was estimated that as much as 3 lakh crore notes will get extinguished leading to a windfall for the government. In the end, almost all the notes returned. This does not mean that there was no black money in the system. Unaccounted cash has found its way into the banking system post-demonetisation as deposits. Finance Minister Arun Jaitley offered a glimpse of this when he stated in his budget speech that between November 8 and December 30, 2016, 1.09 crore accounts had deposits ranging from Rs 2 lakh and Rs 80 lakh while 1.48 lakh accounts saw deposits to the tune of Rs 80 lakh or more. The government is now scrutinising these accounts to identify the ill-gotten wealth and penalise the tax evaders. It is early yet to determine the number of evaders and the quantum of black money that has been deposited in the bank accounts. Also, unaccounted wealth in not necessarily kept in the form of cash alone. Experts say that only 5 percent of black money is in cash form and the rest are either in gold, real estate or stashed away abroad. Unless steps are taken to target the non-cash form of ill-gotten wealth, the fight against black money will remain incomplete.