https://scroll.in/article/827006/five-questions-the-parliamentary-panels-must-ask-rbi-governor-urjit-patel-on-demonetisation

OPINION

Five questions the parliamentary panels must ask RBI governor Urjit
Patel on demonetisation
Why do we still know so little about demonetisation? Where are the calculations?

8 hours ago

Rohan Venkataramakrishnan

If it wasn’t already clear before the Reserve Bank of India said so,
it’s even more evident now that the central bank did not come up with
the idea of demonetisation. Union Minister Piyush Goyal may have
declared that the RBI board recommended the withdrawal of high-value
notes, but it only did so after the government “advised” it to do so.
So asking Urjit Patel, who appears before Parliament’s Finance
Standing Committee on Wednesday, what were the reasons behind the
effort may not lead anywhere.

But that doesn’t absolve the central bank’s role in what was evidently
a badly implemented effort that caused economic stress and even led to
several deaths. More worryingly, we still have very little information
about what the specific aims of the move were, and more than two
months later, no sense of what it has achieved.

The Opposition had a chance to put direct questions to the government
and hold it accountable in the Winter Session of Parliament in
December. Instead, various leaders seemed more interested in scoring
points and turning it into a nationwide campaign against
demonetisation that hasn’t taken off.

As with most legislative processes these days, the real work seems to
be happening in the various Parliamentary panels. It’s through the
questioning of the Public Accounts Committee that we finally got the
admission that the idea for demonetisation officially came from the
government. And over the next few days, Patel will face the finance
panel and the Public Accounts Committee.

This means an opportunity to get more details about the massive move
that somehow remains hard to pin down.

1. Where are the calculations?
The government’s advice to the bank was that demonetisation would
mitigate the triple problems of counterfeiting, terrorist financing
and black money. But such enormous decisions do not, or should not,
take place just because authorities believe something might be true.
Did the RBI look at evidence or calculations, presented by the
government or otherwise, that convinced them the gains of
demonetisation would be more than the shock it caused to the economy?

2. What were the specific aims?
The broad aim was to attack counterfeiting, terrorist financing and
black money, never mind the later messages about a cashless economy.
Naturally, even an effort as large as this will not end any of these
problems, but the intention is that the shock should seriously bring
the numbers down.

Black money: The government has already said it had no estimate of
black money before or after November 8. Cash has amounted to just 6%
of undeclared assets the Income Tax department has found in its raids
over the last few years. Does the RBI have an estimate for the amount
of black money? If it doesn’t, what amount of currency declared
through the government’s two amnesty schemes does it expect as an
adequate indicator that demonetisation worked?
Fake notes: RBI data suggested that seven in every million notes in
circulation in 2015-’16 were fake. That’s 0.0007%. But a large number
of fake notes go undetected. The RBI can expect better detection with
new notes, but they are also supposed to be more secure and harder to
counterfeit. Does the RBI then believe that, after demonetisation, the
number of detected fake notes in circulation will be even lower than
0.0007%?
Terror financing: Is there an estimate of how much Indian currency
goes into terror financing? What does the RBI expect this to come down
to?
If the central bank is unable to answer these questions, it suggests
that we went into the move without any data and are coming out without
numbers either. It is obvious decisions at this level or not binary or
zero-sum, they have to be calculated risks. Again, where are the
calculations? Without these numbers, how will we know if the move
succeeded?

3. What is the cost?
In time, we will learn of the economic cost of this effort, as data on
how the economy performed over the last few months comes in. The RBI
has already lowered its Gross Domestic Product growth rate expectation
from 7.6% to 7.1%.

But what of the actual cost of the currency exchange move? What did it
cost to print all that currency, which some are putting at Rs 12,000
crore? What were the labour costs in turning banks over to currency
exchange efforts from November 8 onward, continued till today? What is
the estimated productivity lost in forcing banks to spend most of the
last two months on these efforts? It’s worth looking at the
quantifiable cost of the exercise, before starting to factor in the
shock to the economy, which will become clearer over the next few
months.

4. Is everything okay with the RBI’s functioning?
When the RBI board, based on the government’s advice, recommended
demonetisation it was at its smallest size in years. The RBI Act
provides for 19 directors, with the suggestion that at full strength
there is one more independent director than internal. On November 8,
it had just 10 directors, and only three independent ones.

Meanwhile, reports have suggested that the printing of the Rs 2,000
note began months before November 8, and indeed the RBI has said that
its offices were already receiving stock of the new notes on that day.
Yet the laws require the RBI’s board to recommend the design, form and
material of bank notes. However, before November 8, the RBI’s board
hadn’t made any recommendations on the Rs 2,000 note. Did the
government bypass it?

Similarly, was there provision made for the expenditure that the RBI
might have to incur as part of this move? Did the RBI board deliberate
on this?

These might seem like technicalities – and indeed compared to some of
the larger questions of demonetisation they are – but they still
suggest the RBI isn’t functioning as the law says it should, and
that’s a problem. Is the governor concerned? What is being done about
it?

5. Whose life is in danger?
The RBI refused to answer a Right to Information request, demanding
details on the number of demonetised notes already in banks on the
night of November 8, according to Bloomberg. The central bank did so
citing a provision that allows for requests to be blocked if there is
a danger to the life or physical safety of anyone who disclosed this
information to the public. Whose life could possibly be in danger if
they disclosed this information?


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Peace Is Doable

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