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by impy
3460 days ago
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As a foreigner visiting India with the demonetisation is also not the most pleasant experience, I had landed on the day that happened. A lot of places luckily accepted credit cards, though in a few cases the authorisation failed (which can also occur at the ATM's, so be careful when queuing) and they don't always have the best infrastructure either (http://imgur.com/a/iJDfw). PayTM isn't an alternative as a foreigner, since you can only charge your account with Indian issued debit or credit cards. |
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On the other hand, anyone disconnected enough not to have an ID or a bank account but wealthy enough to have a few high-denomination bills gets screwed because changing money at the bank requires you to have an ID or an account. They can also sell their cash on the black market, but they get a worse deal because they're trying to hawk a couple bills, not the large bulk transfers that wealthy people are doing.
And, of course, this move decreases the fungibility of Rupees and increases our expectation that the Indian government will do something similarly inconvenient in the future. If the Rupee ever hopes to be a strong currency, this probably didn't help.
I suspect a secondary goal of this move was to initiate a migration away from cash. Once you get rid of cash and make all legal money banked, you can do all sorts of fun stuff like impose negative interest rates. The ECB, Denmark, Sweden, Switzerland, and Japan have already experimented with negative interest rates; I expect to see other nations make moves towards it as well. It's an effective way of doing things like propping up property values, as long as you can force people into it.