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EDITOR IN CHIEF- ABDULLAH BIN SALIM AL SHUEILI

Love of cash hinders move to digital India

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India’s dependency on cash may slow the country’s transition to digital payments despite large numbers of Internet and mobile phone users. For many citizens living in rural areas, cash is still the bedrock of daily existence because of a lack of facilities.


Sudhir Shinde, a farmer from Satara district in India’s western state of Maharashtra says he withdraws more money from his bank than required as the money vending machine in his village has not been operational for months.


“If I need money urgently, I must make a 32 km trip to Satara town, which is not always possible,” said the 37-year-old sugarcane farmer Shinde, while buying fertilisers for his winter-sown crops.


“I always keep money in hand assuming family emergencies like hospitalisation or any other such urgent requirements.”


Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi backed a shock ruling in November 2016 to outlaw 86 per cent of cash in circulation to target undeclared “black money” and fight corruption.


The demonetisation got rid of old 500 and 1,000 rupee banknotes and Modi said that would boost the country’s digital economy, unearth unaccounted wealth and reduce the use of cash.


But 99.3 per cent of the junked currency is back in the banking system, suggesting that only a miniscule portion was unaccounted illicit money or fake currency notes, and India’s addiction to cash is now, perhaps stronger than ever.


One of the key objectives of the note ban was to discourage the use of cash, but India continues to see a surge in currency in circulation even as economic growth has slowed to a six-year low.


Central bank data shows that since the controversial demonetisation gambit, currency in circulation has grown, rising 17 per cent to Rs 21.1 trillion ($295.7 billion) as of the end of March 2019. The ratio of currency in circulation to GDP has risen to 11.23 per cent as of March 2019 up from 8.69 per cent at the end of March 2017.


To be sure, digital transactions have grown, rising 19.5 per cent in value in 2018/19 and 22.2 per cent in 2017/18, the Reserve Bank of India said in a report.


On whether India’s efforts to move to electronic payments has been slow, the central bank noted what it said in a statement last week. To promote digital payment, the RBI has established “state of the art payment systems that are efficient, convenient, safe, secure and affordable” that has resulted in a rapid growth in retail digital payment systems.


Meanwhile, it will promote the use of e-payments for parking, fuel and toll collection, and has ordered banks not to charge bank customers for online transactions in the National Electronic Funds Transfer (NEFT) system from January 2020.


Anecdotal evidence, however, suggests people in Asia’s third-largest economy prefer cash for various reasons, including to avoid paying higher taxes after a national sales tax was implemented in mid-2017 and higher charges from retailers. Smaller stores who don’t enjoy high volume sales often charge customers extra, to make up for what they must pay the service partners for electronic transactions.


Higher operating costs have also led to a slowdown in opening of new ATMs, which has led to cash hoarding.


India has the fewest ATMs per 100,000 people among BRICS nations, according to the International Monetary Fund. Banks hobbled with bad debts have struggled to absorb the cost of software and equipment upgrades mandated by the central bank last year, along with higher land costs in the cities. Other factors such as the country’s rural-urban divide have also affected the migration to electronic payments. — AFP


Swati Bhat and Rajendra Jadhav


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