[Long after the final accounting of this exercise is taken, what will
gall observers will probably be the total unconcern the government
showed about the way the decision affected the lives of hundreds of
millions of ordinary people. Decision after decision was taken with
the intention of maximising the gain to the government, but without a
thought as to how these affected the lives of the most disadvantaged
such as the unbanked. The most striking example of this was the
discontinuation of currency exchange for those without accounts, which
was done in violation of specific promises by the RBI and even
advertisements by the government. Even now, the unbanked find it
difficult to open accounts and salvage whatever savings they have
accumulated over a lifetime because the powers-that-be have not found
it necessary to take their concerns on board. This may yet turn out to
have been a politically astute move, but that won’t change its
character as a morally flawed decision that sought to punish the many
for the sins of the few – and for the sake of a political narrative
that no longer holds water.]

http://indianexpress.com/article/blogs/pm-narendra-modi-demonetisation-note-recall-narrative-fallen-apart-4406642/

How PM Modi’s note recall narrative has fallen apart
Black money stashes are not turning into rubbish, but the government’s
stated objectives are

By: Tony Joseph | Updated: December 3, 2016 9:28 am

[Photo: In the aftermath of November 8 announcement by PM Modi, there
was general euphoria about the impending disaster that was about to
befall black money holders who, it was imagined, would have had to see
their ill-begotten wealth turning into garbage overnight.]

Three weeks ago, the decision to scrap 500 and 1000-rupee notes was
sold as a moral crusade, indeed, as a war on corruption. This
narrative has now fallen apart. On November 29, Lok Sabha forced
through a bill that ends the war and assures safe passage to those who
hold black money in cash.

WATCH VIDEO: Find Out What PM Modi Said About Demonetisation On LinkedIn
[Video]

The bill is an invitation to those who have kept their undeclared
income in cash to pay the government half of it (including tax,
penalty and surcharge) and in return, turn the balance 50 per cent
into legal white money. They would also need to lock in half of the
new, legally- laundered money in a bond specified by the government
for four years. The lock-in is certainly an inconvenience but not a
loss to the black money holders because they would not have been
getting any interest on their cash hoards any way. The new scheme is a
generous offer when compared with the original statements made by the
government that any black money holder found depositing denotified
currency in banks would face a 200 per cent penalty and thus lose
nearly all of his stash.

But this is an even more generous offer when seen in the context of
how professional black money holders will perceive this new amnesty
scheme. First of all, as we know from income-tax raids in the past,
people with black money only have about 6 per cent of it in cash – the
rest is usually in the form of land, apartments, gold, jewellery,
benami bank accounts and so on.

WATCH VIDEO: Speed News: Parliament, Pakiatan, PM Modi, Arun Jaitley & More
[Video]

But for the sake of abundant caution, let us assume the cash
percentage is as high as 10 per cent as some insist. For example, let
us consider a small-sized operator with Rs 10 crore in black money, of
which about Rs 1 crore is in the form of cash. The demonetisation
effort, to begin with, only threatened this Rs 1 crore, and that too,
to the extent that it was held in the form of Rs 500 or Rs 1000 notes.
If we assume that all of it was held in Rs 500 or Rs 1000 notes, then
the possibility was of him losing about a tenth of his total illegal
wealth. Considering that a well-heeled salary man pays about 30 per
cent of his income in taxes every year, the demonetisation move was
the equivalent to a slap on the wrist for the black money holder,
because in percentage terms, he was in danger of losing only a third
of what the honest taxpayer gives to the government every year– and
that too if we assume he could convert none of his Rs 500/ Rs 1000
rupee notes to new ones through some shady scheme or another.

People queue up outside at HDFC Bank at Delhi Cant. (Express photo by
Renuka Puri)

So what is the situation now, with the new law? Now he stands to lose
not even Rs 1 crore, but only Rs 50 lakh, or about 5 per cent of the
black money he holds. In other words, if the black money holder
compares himself to the honest taxpayer, he would probably
congratulate himself for his foresight and planning. He has had to pay
only about a sixth as much as the honest taxpayer, and he can sleep
easy now, knowing that the government itself has officially laundered
all of his remaining cash at a reasonable cost. What he holds in other
assets was under little real threat anyway.

How and why did we reach here? If you remember, in the aftermath of
November 8, there was general euphoria about the impending disaster
that was about to befall black money holders who, it was imagined,
would have had to see their ill-begotten wealth turning into garbage
overnight. There were even widely-shared images of burnt cash floating
on the Ganga and scattered on the streets. Almost everyone supporting
the Notebandi mentioned his satisfaction of seeing the corrupt in
trouble as the main reason

[Video]

But here we are, three weeks later, with that narrative now standing
on its head. The same government that was trying hard to keep black
money holders away from banks by leaking a steady stream of scare
stories about what tax authorities would do to those who dared to put
their black and banned currency notes in banks, is now virtually
beseeching them to come, deposit and declare their stash. “The tax
department will not ask for the source of funds deposited,” said Union
Revenue Secretary Hasmukh Adia. One has to be thankful that the
government hasn’t gone further and announced that those who declare
the maximum amount of black money under the scheme will be considered
for Padma Shris.

With the amnesty scheme in place, it now makes no sense for anyone not
to deposit his old Rs 500 or Rs 1000 notes in bank – why would he let
the full value of it go up in flames, when he can retain half of it
with little risk and no effort? To put it in other words, the amnesty
scheme is NOT an addition to the original plan of keeping black money
out of the banking system and thus turning it into waste paper – it is
a full and complete replacement of it.

Given cash shortages with banks, and ATMs running dry, bankers fear a
surge in rush. (Source: PTI)

So what explains the 180-degree about-turn the government has taken in
a matter of weeks? The short answer is this: The speed with which the
banned currency notes have been returning to the banking system. By
the end of November, two thirds of the outstanding notes had already
been deposited in banks and according to a report in The Indian
Express, it was clear to the government that with one more month
remaining, nearly all of the money would return to the system.
(Demonetisation: Month to go, bankers say 90-95 per cent money will
return to system) The velocity and quantum of return means either that
the original estimates of black money held in cash were wrong, or that
there were enough large loopholes for the black money holders to get
their cash into the system, or a combination of both.

Why is this a problem? This is a problem because the government was
counting on a bonanza of free money for itself if enough people were
scared away from depositing their banned currency notes in banks. This
is how the thinking went, apparently: Currency notes in circulation
are a liability for the RBI, and if say, 10 to 20 per cent of the
outstanding Rs 500 and Rs 1000 notes didn’t return to the banking
system, thus turning themselves into garbage, the liability of the RBI
would have been reduced to that extent– and if you assume that 15 per
cent did not return, the gain could have been as much as Rs 2 lakh
crore. Since the RBI is fully owned by the government, this reduction
in its liability could have been transformed one way or another into a
bounty for the government to use as it deemed fit.

[Video]

So now, if the money is all coming back into the system, that means
this easy bonanza that they had been expecting, has evaporated away
and so has the primary objective of the government. Theoretically, one
can say that the tax department can still go after each of the large
depositors and try to detect the black money holders and prosecute and
punish them and thus recover money for the government. But the scale
of such an operation in a country with hundreds of millions of
depositors could be beyond the abilities of the department and even if
they attempted it, there can be no certainty about the outcome either
in terms of the overall size of the recovery or the time-frame in
which it could be realized. In other words, as things stood, there was
no way the government could have received a windfall and then gone and
announced some electorally rewarding schemes for the masses based on
it – perhaps in time for the five Assembly elections, including that
in the all-important state of Uttar Pradesh, scheduled to be held in
February-March 2017.

A foreign tourist takes pictures of people standing in a queue outside
a bank to exchange and deposit their old, high denomination banknotes
in Kolkata. (Source: Reuters Photo)

The amnesty scheme, therefore, is an attempt to accept the inevitable
and salvage at least some money for the government. How much could
that be? A generous estimate would say half of what was expected
earlier (Rs 2 lakh crore), since only 50 per cent is being demanded of
black money holders now. That could mean Rs 1 lakh crore. But is that
the net gain for the government? Not really. You have to deduct the
cost of the entire exercise from it. The cost of printing alone works
out to Rs 6,000 crore and then there will be other expenses such as
the logistics of the operation on a massive national scale. According
to the Centre for Monitoring Indian Economy, the total printing and
transportation cost comes to Rs 16,800 crore. Can we deduct this Rs
16,800 crore from the 1 lakh crore, and say Rs 83,200 crore would be
the net gain? Not really, because this entire exercise will have a
negative impact on the GDP, and one unavoidable consequence of that
would be a hit on government revenue, which usually forms about 10 per
cent of the GDP. If the GDP is hit by 2 per cent according to what
former Prime Minister Manmohan Singh says is a conservative estimate,
that could cost the government as much as Rs 30,000 crore in revenue,
if we assume for reasons of simplicity that the ratio of tax revenue
to GDP remains constant.

[Video]

But even if one is optimistic and thinks GDP growth will be hit to the
extent of only 1 per cent, not 2 per cent, the hit to government
revenue will still be around Rs 15,000 crore. Can we deduct this from
83,200 crore and say the net gain will be about Rs 68,200 crore? Not
really. There are other costs we have not counted at all – such as
say, compensating developers for the loss of toll on national
highways, estimated at Rs 65 crore a day, or Rs 1,365 crore till
December 2; or the losses in revenue incurred by government
undertakings because of the economic disruption; or the possible rise
in non-performing assets of public sector banks due to induced
slow-down. At a very modest estimate, let’s say the total hit on these
counts is Rs 10,000 crore. We are then left with about Rs 58,200 crore
as the net gain for the government – not even a third of the original
expectation.

How big a deal is that? Big, but not something that will fundamentally
alter government finances. As a percentage of total government
expenditure (about Rs 20 lakh crore) it amounts to less than 3 per
cent. By way of comparison, just the implementation of the 7th Pay
Commission recommendation on the salaries of government employees will
cost the government an additional expenditure of a little over Rs 1
lakh crore annually from this year onwards! The net gain from the note
recall exercise is also less than the amount the government is
committed to providing public sector banks to recapitalise them and
thus protect them from the consequences of humongous bad loans: Rs
70,000 crore over four years, which is itself regarded as highly
insufficient. It is interesting to note that Rs 58,200 crore will be
only twice as large as the money collected through the earlier
voluntary disclosure scheme for black money that closed on September
30 this year and raised Rs 29,000 crore – and this was an exercise
that did not involve bringing the entire economy to a near-
standstill.

[Photo: If we look at it from the point of view of the 1.2 billion
citizens and the entire economy itself, the picture gets much worse.]

In other words, as it stands now, it is unlikely that the net gain to
the government will be a game changer. It is important that whenever
Parliament begins to function properly, the government be asked to
come out with a full cost-benefit analysis that leaves nothing out and
accounts for everything.

So far, we have come to two important realizations: (a) Notebandi is
now not a war on corruption, but is rather a welcome-arch for black
money holders to convert their cash stash into legally white money;
and (b) the bonanza that many saw on November 8 is likely to remain a
mirage.

[Video]

But we are not done yet. We have only looked at the cost-benefit
analysis from the point of view of the government. If we look at it
from the point of view of the 1.2 billion citizens and the entire
economy itself, the picture gets much worse. Even a one-per cent hit
on the GDP means a loss of Rs 1.5 lakh crore, far higher than any
potential gain to the government. In other words, from an economy-
wide perspective, the loss outruns any possible gains by a very wide
margin – it is as if the government has socked the economy for a few
crores more in its own kitty. And this doesn’t even begin to take into
account the personal tragedies and losses that hundreds of millions of
innocent citizens have had to suffer over such a long period.

This, perhaps, explains why the government is keen to present the
Notebandi now in a different light altogether – as a modernisation
move that will lead to a cashless economy, rather than a war on the
corrupt. There are indeed huge and attractive businesses to be built
around mobile payments; this has drawn the attention of top corporate
houses; and the herding of hundreds of millions into mobile payments
will be good news for them. But what positive – or negative impact –
it will have on the unorganised sector and the people dependent on it
is yet to be seen.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi, delivering one of India’s biggest-ever
economic upsets, declared that the bulk of Indian currency notes no
longer held any value and asked anyone holding those bills to take
them to banks to deposit or exchange them. (Source: AP Photo)

What one must also point out is that as long as political parties –
especially the ruling party that is pushing the cashless economy
narrative – do not stop accepting any money in cash, their paeans for
the cashless economy will ring hollow and insincere. If the country as
a whole is ready for a cashless economy, what earthly reason can there
be for a political party, especially the ruling one, not to
discontinue taking donations in cash with immediate effect, and also
set up an independent mechanism to strictly monitor all political
funding?

***Long after the final accounting of this exercise is taken, what
will gall observers will probably be the total unconcern the
government showed about the way the decision affected the lives of
hundreds of millions of ordinary people. Decision after decision was
taken with the intention of maximising the gain to the government, but
without a thought as to how these affected the lives of the most
disadvantaged such as the unbanked. The most striking example of this
was the discontinuation of currency exchange for those without
accounts, which was done in violation of specific promises by the RBI
and even advertisements by the government. Even now, the unbanked find
it difficult to open accounts and salvage whatever savings they have
accumulated over a lifetime because the powers-that-be have not found
it necessary to take their concerns on board. This may yet turn out to
have been a politically astute move, but that won’t change its
character as a morally flawed decision that sought to punish the many
for the sins of the few – and for the sake of a political narrative
that no longer holds water.*** [Emphasis added.]

Tony Joseph is former editor of Business World. The views expressed
are personal.
-- 
Peace Is Doable

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