Reserve Bank of India had said in its annual report
for 2016-17 that 7,62,072 pieces of fake notes were detected in the banking
system last fiscal. It is a whopping increase of over 20% had mainly the
denomination of Rs. 500 and Rs.1000 currency notes which amounted to Rs. 43.47
crores. Every Indian knows that these Fake notes were pushed by Pakistan
through Nepal. The most notorious routes for smuggling fake currency into India
were Bangladesh-Kolkata via North 24 Parganas, Nepal-Gorakhpur and Nepal-Bihar
routes.
Counterfeiter notes are only one aspect of
“debauching” a currency. These notes then get christened as “black money”. We
have this false notion that only unaccounted wealth is black money. Even fake
currency also fall into this category as it is used firstly to market illegal
goods such as narcotics, liquors, weapons, and human trafficking. Secondly
market transactions for such goods are either unreported or
under-reported. Thus subsequent tax
evasion leads to revenue loss leading to underestimation of GDP.
These kinds of transactions involve bribery to twitch
favours in business deals and to bypass administrative rules. Amazingly the
bribery money is not in counterfeiter notes and gets invested in Gold, Benami
properties or gets transferred to other countries through Hawala. Some clever
players often bring it back in the form of FDI or using an NGO. So, now the
Counterfeiter is in the system (among the ordinary citizens) and the RBI minted
notes with the corrupt.
The Government which took over in 2016 watched all
these and decided to demonetize the higher denomination currency notes. Many of
us have failed to understand that what was 20% increase in Fake Indian Currency
notes could have increased to 50% in the next fiscal year and then more the
next year. Demonetization has put a break on this.
Understandably the phase out
of the old notes was a bit chaotic. Some felt that the administration should
have alerted the banking sector prior to announcement, but that would have led
to an abortive demonetization effort. Bandh call given by opposition had lukewarm
response indicating that the country was with the decision and accepted it as regrettable
necessity in long term. We could see the corrupt running helter-skelter not knowing
what to do with the unaccounted currency they had in their vault. Those no more
invalid notes were found floating in rivers and burning in piles of garbage,
apart from those confiscated by authorities from the fraudulent.
It is very easy for the opposition to say that
Demonetisation is a failure. It is the “I told you so attitude” in display
which make them uncaring for the progress of the country. Demonetisation was
just one way to curb corruption. It will have its meaning only if money transactions
are made cashless by using debit cards and internet banking. My anticipation is
that the next move by the government will be to take stock of black money
invested in benami properties.
When the benami properties are investigated
automatically the real estate will get back to its real worth. Just as G.S.T
has been successful in bringing new tax payers in business sector the benami
scrutiny will check the property rates which has soared high in metropolis. The
politicians and bureaucrats pumping money for real estate projects will be hit.
The rates of building materials like sand, steel, marbles, tiles, bricks,
cement and wood will take a dip. Housing will be affordable for all. Time to keep
a tab on the accounts of NGO’s, missionaries, donations pouring into political
parties and bring them within the gambit of formal banking.
If demonetisation is a failure the onus is on all of
us to look for other means to check corruption and black money not to commemorate
it as a “Black Day”. As we have often seen that the mostly the sufferer will
mark it as black day…….Has the opposition lost anything monetarily??? I wonder!!!
November 8th is “Anti- Black money Day”
Please share this to as many as you can….
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