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Wednesday, November 30, 2016

PM Narendra Modi's Notes Ban Neither Intelligent Nor Humane: Amartya Sen To NDTV

"Despotic and authoritarian" is how Nobel Laureate and Bharat Ratna Amartya Sen describes the decision to abruptly ban 500- and 1000-rupee notes. "The alleged objective of dealing with black money is something all Indians would laud. But we have to ask whether this is the good way to do it? This decision is about minimal achievement and maximal suffering," Dr Sen said, appearing from Harvard University on NDTV's The Buck Stops Here.

On November 8, in an unscheduled television address, Prime Minister Narendra Modi announced that just hours later, high-denomination notes would be illegal. 86% of the cash in circulation was benched in one stroke, creating a cash crisis that the PM said would take "50 days" to resolve as he asked people to bear with short-term hardship in the national interest of warring on corruption and tax evasion.

Making the case that only a very small percent of black money is held in cash "about six percent and certainly less than ten percent," Dr Sen said that demonetisation is "small fry in terms of achievement but a big disruptor to the Indian economy." Like other critics of the PM's initiative, he said he backs the intent but faults the execution of the reform, "We all want something to be done about black money. But surely, it also has to be intelligent and humane. That has not happened."

With new bills in short supply, banks run dry early in the morning. ATMs are still being reconfigured to be able to stock the new notes which are of a larger size. Rural India, cut off from formal banking, is especially short-changed, though many say they support the PM's new scheme.


Asked why he used a sweeping adjective like "despotic" to describe an economic policy which is drawing both positive and negative reviews, Dr Sen explained "Despotic in the sense that it breaks down trust in the currency." Making the argument that the rupee is a promissory note, the noted economist said that for the any government to not honour it is to renege on a basic promise. "If suddenly a government says we won't pay you, that is despotic. I am not a fan of capitalism but...trust is key to capitalism; this goes against trust altogether. There is a potential danger of undermining the economy and the very basis of capitalism. Tomorrow the government could do the same with bank accounts and not allow anything above a certain amount unless people prove they are not racketeers."

Dr Sen who has been a trenchant critic of Narendra Modi (his most recent run-in with the government has been over its removal of board members like him from the prestigious Nalanda University in Bihar), rubbished the suggestion that his ideological disagreements with the Prime Minister are guiding his criticism of demonetisation. "I would never criticise Modi for wanting to get rid of black money. If he did it successfully, I would be full of admiration and applause. My worry is that with this move, the lives of law-abiding citizens and white money-holding people will be that much harder. My differences with Modi are over our view of India... and I would like to say the BJP does not have license based on 31 percent of the vote to declare some people anti national just because they happen to disagree with the government."

Dr Sen was honoured with the Bharat Ratna during the NDA tenure of Atal Bihari Vajapyee.

Rajan had been opposed to the concept of demonetisation

Banning Rs 500 and Rs 1,000 Notes Not Feasible: RBI in March 2016

Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s controversial policy of demonetisation has raised several issues in the Parliament, as the Opposition protests the currency ban.
It’s no secret that former Reserve Bank of India governor, Raghuram Rajan, was opposed to the idea of demonetisation. But a letter, dated as late as 15 March 2016, put on paper the RBI’s unambiguous stance on the currency ban.

RBI’s letter (undersigned General Manager) to convener of Anti-Land Grabbing Action Committee.
RBI’s letter (undersigned General Manager) to convener of Anti-Land Grabbing Action Committee.
The RBI, under Rajan, was of the view that banning Rs 500 and Rs 1,000 notes would not be feasible as they constitute “85 percent of the value of notes in circulation”.
Ideologically, too, Rajan had been opposed to the concept of demonetisation. While he has not commented on the government’s current decision, in 2014, Rajan, in a public lecture, questioned the effectiveness of demonetisation.
Unfortunately, my sense is the clever find ways around it. They find ways to divide up their hoard into many smaller pieces. You do find that people who haven’t thought of a way to convert black to white, throw it into the Hundi in some temples. I think there are ways around demonetisation. It is not that easy to flush out the black money. 

Public Sector Banks' Bad Loans Over Rs 6 Lakh Crore As On End-September

Public banks have seen nearly Rs 80,000 crore increase in gross non-performing assets (NPAs) in the three months ended September 2016.

As on September 30, gross NPAs of public sector banks rose to Rs 6,30,323 crore as against Rs 5,50,346 crore by June end.

This works out to an increase of Rs 79,977 crore on quarter on quarter basis.


"The government has taken sector-specific measures (infrastructure, power, road textiles, steel etc) where incidence of NPA is high," Minister of State for Finance Santosh Kumar Gangwar said in a written reply to the Rajya Sabha.

He listed measures like enactment of the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code (IBC) and amendment of the Securitisation and Reconstruction of Financial Assets and Enforcement of Security Interest Act (SARFAESI) and the Recovery of Debt due to Banks and Financial Institutions (RDDBFI) Act aimed at improving resolution or recovery of bank loans.

Besides, he said, RBI has come out with a number of tools such as corporate debt restructuring, formation of Joint Lenders' Forum, strategic debt restructuring scheme and sustainable structuring of stressed assets to fight NPAs.

In another reply, Gangwar said that out of Rs 2.80 lakh crore loans to the iron and steel sector at the end of June, Rs 1.24 lakh crore has gone bad, which works out to 44.54 per cent.

Replying to another question, Gangwar said no corporate loan waiver has been done by the government.

The loan write-off by banks is based on RBI guidelines and board-approved policy, he said, adding that loans are written off after appropriate provisions have been made to take advantage of tax benefits and capital optimisation.

In respect of technical write-offs, RBI has permitted so at the head office level while recovery efforts are still on at the branch level, he said.

During the first quarter ended June 2016, public sector banks have written off Rs 15,163 crore loans as against Rs 5,441 crore.

In the the last fiscal, public sector banks had written off Rs 59,547 crore while private peers Rs 12,017 crore.

Financial year will shift from April - March to Jan- Dec annoucement will be made on 30th Dec 2016

125,000 retired Income Tax officers aged 58-61 years have been recalled by Modi. They have 3 day training from 28-30 Nov and join work on 1 Dec. What work they will do is anyone's guess.🏹

The financial year will shift to Jan- Dec instead of April-March.
Announcement will be made on 30th December.
 There is a strong possibility that Government may scrap Income Tax from FY 2017-18 and replace with Banking Transaction Tax by(BTT).    from 1st April 2017 possibility of only two taxes 1. Direct Tax as BTT and 2.  GST as indirect Tax.

 How does the Government plan to remove black money from India ?

Step 1 : Demonetise Rs.500 and Rs.1000. get Rs.1420000 crores out of the market.

Step 2 : Print Rs.2000 and Rs.500 and Rs.100 in the replacement market.

Step 3 : Dismantle the cash economy by not allowing any cash transaction above Rs.10000 without PAN or Aadhar.

Step 4 : All salaries and business expenses required to be made in cheque or RTGS only to claim expenses in Income Tax. All cash transactions to be disallowed.

Step 5 : A Cash Limitation order will be issued that will allow only maximum cash allowance of total Rs.50000 per person.

Step 6 : As the cash economy is destroyed after a few months, the Rs.2000 note will be demonetised with a limited notice.

With very limited cash available in the market, the cash economy will be strangled to death.

Step 7 : As some of the cash economy will try to shift to Gold, Gold coins manufacturing and imports will be banned.

Step 8 : A Gold and Precious Jewellery control order will be issued which will allow only 500 gram of Gold per person and a certain value of other jewellery. Relaxation will be given for existing jewellery if declared to authorities as per format. After a certain date, all undeclared Gold and jewellery will be liable to be taken over by the state.

Step 9 : A Property and Asset Declaration order will be issued where all property (Land, Buildings and Flats) and shares will have to be declared to the authorities in a particular format. After a certain date, all undeclared property or shares will be liable to be taken over by the state.

That will complete the removal of black money from India.
*Forwarded as received.*

Sunday, November 27, 2016

Demonetization is a foolish step… The poor will suffer the most

Economics professor ARUN KUMAR is one of the most widely quoted authors on black money. He has authored The Black Economy in India (Penguin, 1999) and Indian Economy since Independence: Persisting Colonial Disruption (Vision Books, 2013).
In an interview to India Legal’s Editor-in-Chief, INDERJIT BADHWAR and Associate EditorMEHA MATHUR, Prof Kumar describes how this hasty drive will adversely impact demand, employment and investments. Excerpts:

When and under what circumstances is demonetization used as an economic tool and how common is this practice worldwide?
As a tool for economic surgery it has been used elsewhere, but not in the context it has been used in India. Where it has been used largely is where currency has totally lost its value, like the Soviet Union or Weimar Republic—where you had to carry sackfull of currency to buy your daily supply. There the currency was abolished and new currency created. But India is not in that situation.
Was the Indian economy facing a crisis that needed such a swift and heavy surgical strike?
Not at all. In fact, our macro-economic indicators were reasonably good. But the real point is, what does this move achieve? According to the prime minister, there are two objectives. One is (curbing) terrorist financing and counterfeit currency—and the second is that the black economy has become very large and it is the source of poverty and all the problems in India so we need to get rid of the black economy.
The question is—does demonetization overcome these two problems. As far as counterfeit notes are concerned, they are only 400 per million, which is very tiny. And according to RBI, there is only Rs 400 crore worth of counterfeit currency.
Total currency in circulation is Rs 17.5 lakh crore. It’s not even “oont ke muh me zeera”, as they say in Hindi. It’s negligible.
Terrorists need financing. So they print these fake notes and circulate it. But once they have given the money to another person, it’s circulating within the economy. So they have to print more and more money. That is what you have to stop. And how do you stop that? Not by demonetization, because there are state actors involved in counterfeiting. They can counterfeit the new currency notes also.
India’s growth rate, trade, GDP and forex reserves have been relatively steady. Why meddle so drastically with a system that seemed to be producing results?
This is a complete miscalculation that you have to overcome black economy through this measure. Understand the meaning of this. First you earn income, out of which you save and you create wealth. Whatever income you have, you consume a part, you save a part of it, and that saving you invest in various assets. That gives you your wealth. Wealth is held as a portfolio—you can put it in real estate gold, share market or cash. Cash is only one component of your wealth— possibly one per cent of your wealth. The black economy, which, according to my estimate is 62 percent of GDP, for the current GDP of Rs 150 lakh crore, we are generating Rs 93 lakh crore this year as black income. Black wealth could be three times more so about Rs 300 lakh crore. Out of that, rupees three lakh crore would be held as cash which we can call black money.
So there is a difference between black wealth and black income?
Yes, black income, black money and black wealth, all three are different.
This is the common mistake that people make. They think the three are same. Black money is only one percent of your black wealth. So suppose you are completely successful in eliminating three lakh crore, you are only eliminating 1 percent of your black wealth and three percent of your black income.
The next point is, will you be able to eliminate even rupees three lakh crore? People have found ways of recycling this. On the day this announcement was made, jewelry shops were reported to be open till 3 am, issuing backdated receipts for purchase of gold, etc. One businessman said he had Rs 20 crore rupees and he gave four months’ advance salary to his workers. They will deposit it in their banks. So your black gets utilised. Then, the Jan Dhan Yojana is being used in large amount in rural areas. The landlord can tell, say, 100 people to take Rs 20,000 each from him, deposit, and return it to him later. So you won’t be able to demobilize even rupees three lakh crore, at best you may demobilize Rs 50,000 to Rs 70,000 crore, so neither of the two objectives that the PM has stated will be fulfilled.
Further, you are only demobilizing rupees three lakh crore at the most for one year but black income generation will continue as before. Say, by selling spurious drugs, narcotic drugs, charging capitation fee, under-invoicing and over-invoicing in business and trade and so on. Therefore, cash will again be generated here. And you are introducing Rs 2,000 notes so storage of black will be even more easy. Therefore, you are defeating your own logic that large denomination currency is used to stash black money so it needs to be demonetized.
We all know India has a huge and thriving parallel economy. Perversely, this parallel economy, run entirely on cash, has produced results in terms of employment, consumer demand, rural credit, informal “banking,” and money-flow. How will demonetization hit/hurt this sector? This is also being projected as a Robin Hood kind of measure—taking it from the rich and giving it to the poor. That is the political message going out. Is this a pro-poor measure?
No. basically, it’s not a parallel economy. Black economy and white economy are largely intertwined in India. So when you sell your real estate property you generate black and white income simultaneously. When you produce sugar, you don’t show 10 percent and show 90 percent of the output. That’s why when the black economy is affected the white economy is also affected. This move, which is supposed to impact the black economy, is affecting the white economy terribly. Demand is going down.
As someone gave a very good analogy, if you take out 85 percent blood from somebody’s body and then put five percent into it, what will happen to that person? He will die. Similarly, when you take out 85 percent liquidity from the economy and slowly replace it by five percent, then the circulation of income goes down. Footfalls in malls are falling, charging of mobile phones is declining, the balloon seller is not able to sell balloons, the small trader is not able to sell goods. Even the large trader is not able to sell produce because discretionary expenditure has slowed down. For example, instead of buying a shirt I decide to buy it next month. So circulation of income is slowing down, leading to a decrease in demand. When demand slows down, production slows down, employment drops and investment falls. And when investment falls it will have long-term consequences.
If this goes on for a month or two, investment will decline and, the impact will persist for more than a year. Anyway the cash shortage will not be sorted out very quickly so demand will be affected for much longer than 50 days.
You have to replace the Rs 500 and Rs 1,000 notes worth Rs 14.5 lakh crore that you printed over 15 years and you have to replace it very quickly. That is not possible because you need paper and ink which are largely imported. And ink is in short supply, which is why they floated a tender a few days back. According to Business Standard, it will take 108 days to replace the old currency, provided there is no shortage of ink or paper. And if you are printing Rs 100 notes, then you need to print 10 times more notes than for a Rs 1,000 note and that will take a lot more time.
The next point is, people are hoarding currency because they are not sure when the supply will be normalized. As a result, the demand for currency will be 50 percent more. The people who will suffer the most are those in the unorganized sector, as they don’t have credit or debit cards or card readers. They are the ones who need more currency in circulation. The entire agriculture is unorganized sector. This sector is also a major component of manufacturing and services.
Is there the danger of a huge chunk of people being left “economically disabled” for a long time to come?
That’s what is happening. So the balloonwala’s earning has dropped sharply. A beggar complained that people are not giving alms now and she had four children and one of them died for lack of food. Even those who don’t deal with Rs 500 and Rs 1,000 notes are being impacted. In rural areas, farmers are not able to buy seeds and fertilizers. Arhtiyas (rural commission agents) don’t have money to lend. So, sowing next season may also be affected. Money is what you don’t eat. With money you buy food, clothes and services. So money is for circulation. It’s like the blood flow of the body, which keeps everything going. If there is a shortage of that then there is a problem.
At the moment we are feeling the discomfort. When do you think will real pain start?
The real pain for the poor is already on. Real pain for the middle classes is less because we can use credit cards, etc. It will start when our income gets affected. When production slows then middle class people will face lay off. And they will begin to feel the pain. When truckers go on strike, which is a possibility. If the government had prepared properly and managed to create enough supply of new currency then possibly this pain would have been less.
The other option would have been benign neglect.
Coming to options, this move does not sort out the black economy but creates problems for the whole economy. The point is that black economy has not been created yesterday. It has been growing for 70 years. So this problem can’t be solved overnight. There is no magic wand. What you could have done immediately is to appoint a Lokpal to bring about accountability in the system; one of the key ways of tackling black money. Businessmen, politicians, bureaucrats, police and judiciary are not accountable. So how do you bring about accountability? That’s the key. If you can bring about accountability of these sections then you can solve the problem of black money. So RTI for political parties is essential but they do not agree. Whistleblowers are very important because they are the ones who expose the scams—be it Vyapam or Adarsh etc. But instead of strengthening the Whistleblowers Act it is sought to be diluted.
Then we are not doing much about simplifying direct tax. There is GST but more important is the Direct Tax Code Bill. You have to simplify your direct taxes. Intelligence agencies tab Hawala on daily basis but you are not doing anything about that. So, there are many things you can do immediately because you have the laws. That shows the intention is not there. If you had taken recourse to these laws, you could have targeted the three percent of people who indulge in black money without adversely affecting the 97 percent not generating black incomes. In fact, 97 percent are already the sufferers due to the black economy and now another burden is placed on them, without solving the problem of the black.
And you have not offered carrot to those who have by default become part of the black economy.
No, the Income Declaration Scheme (IDS) was there till September 30, wherein you could disclose the black amount for 15 percent penalty. The FM said: “Please come clean, then you can sleep in peace.” But as long as you say we will not take steps against the corrupt businessman he is happy. So wherever amnesty has been given that has not worked.
Voluntary disclosure scheme (VDS) has been implemented six times in India. The government gave an undertaking in the Supreme Court in 1997 that we will not have this scheme ever again, the reason being that it’s unfair to the honest person. The honest businessman’s capital is rising slowly because he is paying full tax. The dishonest businessman’s capital is rising fast. So the honest one says let me also become dishonest. The CAG report on voluntary disclosure scheme in 1997 said two things. People have become habitual tax offenders. Those who declared in the earlier five schemes also declared in the sixth scheme. They think another scheme will come, let me generate more black income today. Therefore after 1997 they have not done a VDS, although the IDS of 2016 was also like VDS.
The Mauritius route is also like a VDS. You take the money out, bring it back through round tripping and so you don’t pay tax. So the system has created these easy ways of generating black income. We have wonderful laws. But we don’t implement them. Political will is needed to implement laws.
Another thing, cash does not necessarily mean black. So of the Rs 17.5 lakh crore, Rs 14.5 lakh crore is in Rs 500 and Rs 1,000 notes. Out of that, at least 50 percent would be with businesses. If you go to petrol pump or shops you see wads of currency notes with the cashier at the end of the day. Railways, airport—everywhere it’s needed. Companies have petty cash. Bulk of the cash is white which has to be used for circulating the economy. As to households, an ordinary peon generating Rs 10,000-20,000 of black is nothing compared to the size of the black economy. One Madhu Koda generating Rs 6,000 crore of black is more than the entire black income generated by all class C and D employees.
The misnomer is that black economy means cash. That is where the understanding of Modi is lacking. He thought that if he demobilizes the cash the black economy will collapse.
But that sounds more like a self-serving political ideology….
The political ideology is that I will be the hero of the poor, that I have eliminated the black economy that was affecting the poor. What he might do if that Rs 2 lakh crore doesn’t come back is to say I am giving 10 crore families Rs 20,000 each. These rich people had stolen this amount, so I have taken it back from them and distributed it to the poor. But it can fall flat for the following reason: while they may get Rs 20,000 one shot, if they lose their employment, they will lose far more over the year.
So as you are saying its very basic genetic structural reforms and which means gradualismBecause reforms can’t come without gradualism. Like Chandrashekhar had to mortgage gold as that was a crisis situation. Even to some extent wheat control orders of Indira Gandhi in 1972 were passed during shortage times.
But the point is that those (measures) were affecting where the crisis was. This is affecting everything.
So it is a billion dollar political blunder.
The trading community will desert him as far as I can tell, because traders are very upset. Farmers are upset, workers are upset.
What they will do is to restore money supply to Delhi, Mumbai, Kolkata and Chennai so that the national press says the queues are dwindling. But there will be little money in villages. They have to walk long distances to get to the bank for money and often return empty handed. And there’s little money in Tier-2 and Tier-3 towns.
Now they will go after lockers….
No, that will affect only the middle class. The poor doesn’t use lockers.
But you get money for political parties from this three percent.
But if you have the political will to do this you should also have had the political will to do that. Like, a UP leader is reported to have told funders to take back old notes and give new notes. So, political funding won’t stop. Now it will be easier with Rs 2,000 notes. They won’t be harmed. I was talking to a commissioner who said we don’t touch those cases where we know there is political backing. Anyway, Income Tax department doesn’t have the capability to handle so many cases.
It’s just one man’s mind at work….
He just didn’t consult anyone. In his address he said that the departments of government and bankers are hearing this for the first time.
We have to look at Article 21 of the constitution. Property right has been granted by the constitution. Your job has been recognized as a fundamental right.
He is not doing that. He is replacing old currency with new currency. He is not depriving you of your property.
But he is taking away livelihoods.
That’s the consequence of this move. As far as property is concerned, he is not taking away your property. It’s a legal tender saying “I promise to pay” and government is paying with new currency—of equal value. But it creates recession. It’s a foolish step. Any policy can go wrong.
The SC can condemn you for the process.
The SC is a responsible institution. It can say anything orally, scold, but when it comes to judgment it is circumspect. PILs have been filed and government wants them consolidated in the Supreme Court but the court has refused that till now. But ultimately it is quite likely that the court will say it’s a policy issue and therefore we can’t do anything.
One man is trying to deliver on something that is undeliverable, against the advice of everybody else. 
That’s not how you run such a complex country like India. If I were there I would have asked 100 people. He didn’t trust his own cabinet and took away their mobiles and confined them to a hall till 8 pm. Urjit Patel called all bankers and told them to watch an important announcement. This is absolutely not the way to make such a complex policy in a complex country like India.
Lead picture: Professor Arun Kumar is regarded as an authority on the black economy of India. All PhotosAnil Shakya

source indialegallive.com

Saturday, November 26, 2016

Media talks about the Long Queues, But What about the Aam Banker

Its been 16 days since the Demonetisation annoucment happened on 8th Nov evening. There are thousands of articles that have been already published in the newspaper,  social media Tv chhanel  around the long queues, the challenges faced by the poor people, the folks which are standing in queues on someone else's behalf, the deaths of individuals while standing in lines, people having marriage problems, farmers having crop problems problem face in the vegetable market, problem in bus autorikshaw and small grocery shop However, we have seen really few to almost none media coverage around the challenges of the Aam Banker.

 We are fully supportive of this move by the Government, we believe that the effort put in by the Aam Banker needs to be lauded & awarded in some shape or form.In the last 2.5 years, Bankers have been at the forefront of operating at the seams of challenges first while doing the Jan-Dhan Yojana, and then through various other initiatives of the Government to bring the country into the Banking space. In a recent article in the Economic Times, it was pointed that the heads of all major banks were called in to a meeting with RBI at 7 pm on 8th Nov, and they saw the announcement together on a TV in the room. With so little time to prepare, we can imagine the amount of work that must have gone in from each individual banker to make this as smooth as possible. We have personally heard people saying that Bankers should be treated at par or next in line as our soldiers considering the amount & scale of effort being put in by them for the country. From my personal experience till yesterday every banker leaved home around 7.30 to 8.00 a. and returned hhome around 11.00 p.m  to 12.00 midnight. No one talk about us even our union leader.Management are busy  to show their performance to finance department. One PSU bank opened 18 counter in one branch  for  note exchange in  Delhi  and  MD of said bank  sent a photo  to Mr jetly to proved his performance.


We invites all its fellow active Bankers to provide their insight into their feelings about the Demonetisation exercise, and how much effort they are putting in on a daily basis. Any anecdotes about how a banker has helped their community would be welcomed.  

Main article collect from ABS

Out of 2.15 lakh ATM in India only 40000 ATM in Rural Are --- HOw the problem solve

Remember the long queues at bank branches and spending hours to do a simple transaction such as cash withdrawal?

Most of you may not, because the advent of ATMs changed that trend a long time ago, providing customers access to money any time. But after the Centre announced the demonetisation scheme a fortnight ago, people in cities and metros were seen queueing up outside ATMs to do a simple cash withdrawal. And this, when over 80 per cent of the 2.15 lakh ATMs as of June 2016 are in metro, urban and semi-urban areas.

With only 40,000-odd ATMs available in rural areas, access to money in the remotest parts of the country posed a greater challenge. While public sector banks operate only about 20 per cent of their ATMs in rural areas, the reach of private banks in the hinterland is far poorer with just 8 per cent of their ATMs in these areas.

According to data put out by the RBI, State Bank of India has the highest number of ATMs in the country operating 49,669 ATMs as of June 2016, followed by ICICI Bank, Axis, HDFC Bank, Canara Bank and Bank of Baroda.
Bunched up

All the top banks have over three-fourth of their ATMs in urban, metro and semi-urban areas. There are a few banks such as UCO Bank, United Bank, Punjab and Sind Bank that have a higher — 34-38 per cent of their branches in rural areas. But given that ATMs of these banks are fewer in number (less than one to one per cent of the total number of ATMs), it does not help in better reach.

SBI has a little under 8,000 ATMs in rural areas; the second largest network belongs to Punjab National Bank with a far lower number of around 2,700. The count reduces significantly to less than 1,000 ATMs after the top 10 banks.

The National Payments Corporation of India (NPCI) puts out a more granular data covering all members of the National Financial Switch — the largest network of ATMs in India. This includes 99 direct member banks, 587 sub-member banks, 56 Regional Rural Banks (RRB) Banks and eight white label ATM providers as of October 2016.

The weak penetration of ATMs across the country is starker in the figures put out by the NPCI. As of October 2016, there are 2.3 lakh ATMs across the country.

Of this about 92 per cent are operated by direct member banks. Sub- member banks and RRBs put together have only about 3,700 ATMs. The rest are white-label ATMs.

One of the initiatives that the RBI took a couple of years back, was to grant licences to non-bank entities to set up white-label ATMs (WLAs) in the country. The main objective of this was to expand reach of ATMs in semi-urban and rural areas, where banks were not able to put up ATMs. Under the RBI’s guidelines, a minimum number of WLAs have to be installed in Tier-III to -VI centres, depending on the scheme opted by each player.

White-label ATMs

Hence almost 41 per cent of WLAs operate in rural areas. However since the total number of WLAs itself is significantly smaller than bank-operated ATMs, access to money still remains a challenge. As of October 2016, there were just 14,427 white label ATMs. Of the 8 players in this market, two players — Tata Communications Payment Solutions (8, 941) and BTI Payments (4, 087) — alone constitute 90 per cent of total white label ATMs. The number of ATMs set up by rest of the players, are far lower in the tally.

With the number of transactions failing to scale up in these remote areas, WLA operators have found it difficult to generate revenues and hence expand further.

Demonetisation: Currency recall could cost India a massive Rs 1.28 lakh crore, says CMIE

The cost of withdrawing high-denominationcurrency notes to wipe out black money from the country will be about Rs 1.28 lakh crore during the 50-day window till December 30, the Centre for Monitoring Indian Economy (CMIE) said.

The overall cost could be much higher, the private economy watcher estimated. The demonetisation invalidated 86% of the Rs 17.8 lakh crore of currency that was in circulation on October 28. “A steady stream of news reports of empty mandis, low footfalls at malls and drop in business in restaurants, stressed factories paint a grim picture of the effects of a sudden withdrawal of liquidity from markets,” CMIE said in a report on Thursday.

Emphasising that all estimates are conservative and limited to the 50-day window, CMIE said the government and the Reserve Bank of India are estimated to bear a cost of Rs 16,800 crore, largely on account of printing new currency notes and transporting them to banks, ATMs and post offices.

CMIE said businesses are expected to pay the biggest price of the demonetisation, which became effective on November 9, and the immediate impact could be about Rs 61,500 crore, or 48% of the total cost of the exercise.

“We estimate the direct impact on business in terms of the drop in discretionary spending by households. This alone adds up to more than half a trillion rupees during the 50-day period till end of December,” it said. After enterprises, the other big sector to get hit is banks, which, according to CMIE, “lose a lot more.”

Wage levels of bankers are higher than those of the average person in the queue and banks suffer overheads and operational costs in terms of recalibrating ATMs to dispense new notes. “Banks would do little else during this 50-day period and we estimate that they would bear a cost of Rs 35,100 crore,” it said.

People standing in queues to exchange or deposit old currency notes bear 12% of the total cost and could lose Rs 15,000 crore in foregone wages during the period. The long-term impact could be more, CMIE said.

“All estimates are admittedly conservative. All estimates are limited to the 50-day window. However, the impact of low liquidity, broken supply chains and loss of confidence in consumers is likely to impact the economy over a longer period,” CMIE said. 

Thursday, November 24, 2016

Deaths of people including 11 bank officers in the last 12 days who is responsible?

Leader of bank officers’ union

D Thomas Franco, senior vice president of 

All India Bank Officers Confederation,

 says Urjit Patel morally responsible for causing crisis, 

deaths in country.

Written by Arun Janardhanan | Chennai | Updated: November 21, 2016 8:02 am



A TOP leader of India’s largest confederation of bank officers has called for the resignation of RBI governor Urjit Patel, whom he held responsible for causing “havoc” to the economy with the unprepared decision to demonetise currency.
D Thomas Franco, senior vice president, All India Bank Officers Confederation which represents over 2.5 lakh senior officers from all nationalised, old-generation private sector, cooperative and regional rural banks in India, told The Indian Express that it is the RBI governor who should take moral responsibility for the crisis and the deaths of people including 11 bank officers in the last 12 days.
Franco said the government could have taken lessons from other countries and from its own demonetisation drive in 1978, when then RBI governor I G Patel had advised the government against the move. “We all know that neither Prime Minister Narendra Modi nor Finance Minister Arun Jaitley is an economist,” Franco said. “We have economists in RBI to take the right decisions on matters relating to economy and people’s lives. The present governor has utterly failed in his role by taking a crucial economic decision without planning, which has brought havoc to the nation’s economy and lives of the majority.

10 arguments on demonetisation I am fed up of

Two weeks after Prime Minister Narendra Modi announced the demonetisation of Rs 500 and Rs 1000 notes, I am tired of running from one bank to another or in search of an ATM that will spew out cash.
Apart from the fatigue caused by all this physical activity, my ears are also weary. For the last fortnight all one has been hearing have been these 10 things from Modi's supporters waiting alongside me in queues at different banks and ATMs.
1. 'Takleef hoti hai par thik hai (It is tough, yeah, but it's okay)'
I really admire such people who are willing to stoically bear the inconvenience caused by Modi's call for the larger good.
Prime Minister, you are truly blessed because 80% of those I met agree with you on the need for demonetisation, never mind their own suffering.
The PM said Indians would have to bear the brunt for 50 days, but looking at the grim ground situation, one hopes this deadline is not extended.
2. 'Corruption will be eradicated'
Are you serious?
Does it mean one will never pay a bribe to corrupt babus?
Does it mean educational institutions that charge hefty capitation fees will stop the practice?
Does it mean the traffic cop won't demand a bribe if you are caught jumping a signal?
I hope all this happens post December 30. If not earlier.
3. 'Black money will disappear'
Sigh!
Does it mean jewelers won't accept payment in cash?
Does it mean automobile showrooms won't accept cash payments to give you a discount on fancy cars?
Does it mean we will never again read in newspapers that some bureaucrat was caught with crores and crores of black money stashed at home?
4. 'Our soldiers are standing at the border, why can't you stand in queues?'
Over 55 people, it is said, have died standing in bank queues in the last 15 days, but demonetisation's cheer leaders haven't stopped throwing this line at all and sundry.
If you counter this argument, you've had it.
It's possible a defamation case will be filed against you and you could even be charged with sedition, so my advice is, turn a Beethoven's ear to this argument.
5. 'If not Modi, who is the option? Pappu?'
I am tired of hearing the Congress vice0-president being referred to as Pappu.
Whoever coined the term for him has done a real disservice to all those named Pappu.
Whoever is saying that should go in 2019?
Airing a genuine complaint that his vision has not been properly implemented on the ground doesn't need to be countered with this argument, surely.
6. 'Check the scams under Congress and then talk against demonetisation'
Those who oppose demonetisation must look at scams during Congress rule, and the reference here is not just to the 10 years under the UPA.
This list begins right from the jeep scam of 1948, the Mundhra scandal of the 1950s to Bofors and everything else in between till the 2G and CWG scams.
But what about the scams under BJP governments, did you say, like the Vyapam scam in Madhya Pradesh, the PDS scam in Chhattisgarh, or why Dushyant Singh, MP, Rajasthan Chief Minister Vasundhara Raje's son, allegedly took a loan from Lalit Modi? Well...
7. 'Those who oppose demonetisation are anti-national'
Says who?
Maharashtra Chief Minister Devendra Fadnavis, that's who.
Point noted, Mukhya Mantriji. I support demonetisation.
Now please courier my desh bhakti certificate to my home?
Or shall I come over to collect it from you in person?
I await your patriotic response.
Yours sincerely,
Aam Aadmi
Clarification: I am not a member of Arvind Kejriwal's party.
8. 'People stood for 10 hours for the Coldplay concert and Jio SIM card'
Oh, did they?
Were they forced to stand in queue or did they do so willingly, on their own?
The answer is obvious; they chose to stand in these queues.
Demonetisation forced people to stand in long bank queues.
And if you can't see the difference, I suggest you see your ophthalmologist at the earliest.
9. 'Why don't people use plastic money?'
Very good idea, but I am late to the party.
I never used plastic money before November 8, and now my situation is like Elvis Presley.
He crooned these lines, 'We are caught in a trap, I can't walk out.'
The song was called, aptly, Suspicious Minds.
10. 'Don't instigate people'
Instigate people? Me?
I have only been running helter-skelter from one ATM to another to get some cash, and juggling my schedule to not miss out on work, family, friends...
I have no time to instigate people because I am struggling to pay for the daily services I avail of.
Opposition stalwarts like Arvind Kejriwal and Mamata Banerjee may be 'instigating' people, not me.
Despite everything, the hardships, even the provocations, why are people not getting instigated?
"The answer is simple," one Modi supporter told me, "Political parties don't have any black money left to pay the goons for rioting."

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