http://www.business-standard.com/article/economy-policy/why-demonetisation-is-greatest-blunder-by-a-govt-in-69-years-of-free-india-116123100547_1.html

Why demonetisation is greatest blunder by a govt in 69 years of free India
For one, everyone seems to have forgotten that if new notes are of a
different size, ATMs won't work

Prem Shankar Jha
<http://www.business-standard.com/author/search/keyword/prem-shankar-jha>
December
31, 2016 Last Updated at 18:51 IST

December 30, the deadline
<http://www.business-standard.com/search?type=news&q=Deadline>Prime
Minister Modi set for completing his exercise in demonetisation
<http://www.business-standard.com/search?type=news&q=Demonetisation>has
come and gone, and there is now no room to doubt that it was the single
greatest blunder
<http://www.business-standard.com/search?type=news&q=Blunder>that any
government has made in the 69 years that India has been free. On November
8, Mr Modi demonetised 20 billion bank notes, accounting for 86 per cent of
the cash in circulation in the Indian economy. But only a fraction of the
new currency notes needed to replace them had been printed. As if this was
not inept enough ‘somebody’, that is to say everybody from the prime
minister to the head of the Reserve Bank, ‘forgot’ that if the new notes
were of a different size from the old, the ATMs would not work.  The result
was that, like a car engine run without lubricating oil, the economy simply
seized up.

The impact on the economy has not only been catastrophic but highly
unequal. Those with bank accounts and credit cards were merely
inconvenienced. Those who earn and spend mostly, or entirely in cash, found
themselves rendered penniless overnight. These were the poor of India.
Banks still account for only a little over 30 percent of total credit
extended in the country. The balance comes from moneylenders who deal in
cash. That credit collapsed.   In terms of value the proportion of
transactions that has been digitized is also about the same. But this
figure is deceptive because in numbers around 90 percent of transactions
still take place in cash. This entire segment – the lion’s share—of the
economy is now paralysed.

The fewer are the transactions in the economy, the lower is the income they
generate. There is now a consensus among economists and bankers, therefore,
that the GDP will shrink in the second half of this fiscal year. Shortly
after the demonetisation
<http://www.business-standard.com/search?type=news&q=Demonetisation>Goldman
Sachs slashed its growth estimate for the second half of the year by 1.6
percent and predicted that the GDP would grow by 6.8 percent. This was 0.8
per cent below its original estimate.  Deutsche bank similarly estimated
that the annual growth would be around 6.5 percent. But the most
pessimistic estimate was that of Ambit Capital which forecast that the
economy would actually shrink in the remainder of the year, and bring the
annual growth rate down to only 3.5 percent for the year.

Anecdotal evidence suggests that Ambit’s estimate is likely to prove
closest to the mark. 90 percent of India’s more than 300 million
non-agricultural unorganized labour is paid daily or weekly in cash. To pay
them their employers have to have that cash first. The government’s severe
weekly withdrawal limits have made it virtually impossible to pay these
workers in the new legal tender. So far employers were paying them in old
notes and asking them to convert these into the new money. But this
loophole has been shrinking and will shut on December 30.

As a result, Mazdoor Nakas—casual labour markets-- where many of these
workers congregate every morning in the search for work, now receive a
trickle of hopeful aspirants, as the news has spread that their employers,
mostly in the construction, do not have the cash with which to pay them.
There is a swelling reverse stream of migrant workers returning to their
home villages, where the cash they have managed to save before the calamity
will last longer than in the city. Sectoral information from organized
industry for the month of November was bleak: a 20 percent fall in auto
sales, 35 to 40 per cent in two wheelers, 63 per cent in tractors.

But the most severe crunch has taken place in the rural areas, where nearly
all transactions are in cash and there are far fewer banks. The
demonetisation
<http://www.business-standard.com/search?type=news&q=Demonetisation>occurred
just as farmers in north India in particular were selling their Kharif crop
and making their purchases for the Rabi. There is some preliminary which
suggest that the area sown with Rabi crops has therefore shrunk but the
full impact upon the Rabi will only be known as the crop ripens. What is
certain is that farmers all over India have minimized their purchases of
non-essential goods. This will killthe fillip that the bumper Kharif
harvest would have given to the consumer goods industries.

Mr Modi has sought to reassure the people that this is only a short term,
and necessary pain that the people have to suffer, to cleanse the black
money of corruption and black money. Once it is over the economy will not
only revive, but emerge stronger than ever.  This is wishful thinking. For
the sharp cut in spending that has taken place will last for the entire
time, now estimated at up to six months more, that it will take for all the
old notes to be replaced. During all this time spending will remain
constrained so income growth will fall too. This means that the decline in
consumer spending will persist.

This will force manufacturers to cut production in order to clear their
unsold stocks. That will cause a second round of reduction of orders and
retrenchment of employees, so another contraction in income and
expenditure.  The economy will therefore continue to glide downwards till
it bottoms out. Left on its own the economy is likely to take another two
years to recover. By hen 2019 will have come and gone, and so will the Modi
government.

If Mr Modi wishes to revive the economy quickly enough to recoup his
party’s political fortunes, he will have to give it a huge jolt, not unlike
the electric shock given to patients suffering a cardiac arrest. The only
way in which he can do that is through a huge cut in interest rates. By
this I do not mean a cut of 50 or even 100 basis points in policy rates. I
mean a slew of changes in various policy rates that will bring the lending
rates of the commercial banks lend to investors of five to seven percent
below the banks down to at most five per cent; that is six to seven percent
below that rates that had prevailed before demonetisation.

A cut of this magnitude will enable India’s dying infrastructure and real
estate companies to refinance their debt and thereby halve their interest
costs. This alone will enable a large proportion of these companies to pull
out of the red and take up many of the Rs 8,80,000 crore worth of ‘stalled’
projects that they abandoned when interest rates began to rise, and
industrial growth to sink, six years ago.

A halving of bank lending rates will also revive the real estate sector as
millions of home buyers will once more be able to meet their monthly
installment payments, and  give a huge fillip to the sale of consumer
durables that account for more than a quarter of manufacturing output.

But how will Mr Modi bring interest rates down so sharply now , when
neither he nor his predecessor were able to persuade the RBI to do so
earlier, and when he has formally  ceded the entire power to set them to
the RBI and its newly created monetary policy committee? The latter
contains economists who, one presumes , are more sensitive to economic
growth issues than the bankers of the RBI, but even they will be bound by
the now official diktat of ‘inflation targeting’.

Inflation targeting requires central banks to keep lending rates in the
economy above the rate of inflation at all times. Its purpose is not
economic growth but financial stability, because doing so reassures all
Indian, and particularly foreign, holders of Indian money that the
government will not allow the value of their savings and investment to
depreciate. Advocates of inflation targeting claim that growth will
automatically pick up when prices and exchange rates stabilize, but they
are unable to describe the chain of cause and effect that will make this
happen. There is also very little evidence in the experience of other
countries that had adopted inflation targeting, to buttress this claim. On
the contrary, South Korea’s two-decade long surge to prosperity took place
in the midst of a 21percent annual rate of inflation and a continuous
devaluation of the won to counteract its impact upon external
competitiveness.

In India inflation targeting, which has been the informal mantra of the RBI
since 2006, has bestowed the kiss of death on industry, infrastructure,
construction, and therefore  employment. This is because it does not
distinguish between inflation caused by an excess of demand in the economy,
which high rates can bring down, and one cause by shortages of supply,
whether of food grains, industrial  raw materials ( usually a  reflection
of rising global commodity prices) , or labour which, by curbing
production, they can only intensify.

India’s cost of living index is sticky, and has diverged further and
further from the wholesale price index of inflation that the government
used earlier, because ever since 2007, its CPI inflation has reflected
local and global shortages, and not the state of domestic demand. Judged by
the latter, which is reflected both by the wholesale price index and the
GDP deflator, the true rate of demand inflation in the country was zero or
negative even before Mr Modi exploded his demonetisation
<http://www.business-standard.com/search?type=news&q=Demonetisation>
bombshell.

In India inflation targeting will play a useful role if it keeps interest
rates two to three percent above the rate of demand inflation. By that
yardstick today even a five percent long term rate of interest would be on
the high side. So bringing commercial bank lending rates down to this level
is the minimum that Mr Modi should do.



-- 
Peace Is Doable

-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"Green Youth Movement" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
To post to this group, send an email to [email protected].
Visit this group at https://groups.google.com/group/greenyouth.
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.

Reply via email to