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The whole "demonetization" argument seemed blatantly propagandistic to me. The stated goal was to repatriate "black money" (theoretically large untaxed cash reserves held by rich Indians). Let's assume that "black money" is a real problem and not an overstated political bogeyman. Let's ignore the fact that the last thing anyone with serious money is going to store wealth in is cash (especially not Rupees). So you get rid of your largest denominations and what do these theoretical rich people do? They sell their cash at a slight loss for lower denominations. Poor (but still identified and banked) people can make a quick buck by trading all their cash for slightly more cash at the soon-to-be-useless denominations and trading them at a bank (under the allowed daily trade limits). 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. |
It absolutely is a real problem. I would say that undocumented cash transactions are the default, not the exception.
> Let's ignore the fact that the last thing anyone with serious money is going to store wealth in is cash
The kind of "wealthy" people you're thinking of are not necessarily the sorts targeted. We're not talking about rich industrialists and financiers (those folks have access to the same tax avoidance tactics in use in the West, or they can just ship the money abroad), but entire industries like general retail, real estate and domestic construction that have been running almost entirely on cash that never goes on any audited book. Until demonetization, you simply could not buy most properties in India if you weren't willing to pay at least half the asking price in off-book cash. I'm not sure how those big-ticket transactions are taking place now, but one can probably guess from the number of people already caught with massive sums of the _new_ banknotes.