India’s Currency Ban Under Fire One Year Later

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11 November, 2017

It's been a year since India's government banned the use of high-value paper money. That decision is being heavily criticized by some individuals and groups.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi – who ordered the action in November 2016 – has repeatedly defended his decision. The move removed India's 500 and 1,000 rupee notes from use.

Modi has said the ban was necessary to fight corruption and target "black money." Black money is a term used to describe undeclared wealth that is not taxed. He said the move was also intended to get rid of fake currency and reduce terror financing.

The ban affected about 86 percent of the country's currency. It led to huge cash shortages for nearly two months. Millions of people stood in long bank lines to get cash for their daily needs.

About 75 percent of India's workforce depends on the country's cash economy for employment.

Some critics say the ban greatly harmed India's economy at a time when it was experiencing healthy growth. Former Prime Minister Manmohan Singh has called the move "reckless."

Singh recently spoke out against the ban again, saying that "nowhere in the world has any democracy undertaken such a coercive move." He said the measure was hurting small and medium businesses across the country.

The Centre for Monitoring Indian Economy is a Mumbai-based think tank. It estimated that about 1.5 million jobs were lost in the first four months of 2017 following the currency ban.

But government officials recently declared the year-old policy a success and celebrated the anniversary as "anti-black money day."

Finance Minister Arun Jaitley said on Facebook the country's dependence on cash had fallen by nearly 3.89 trillion rupees. He also said the cash to Gross Domestic Product, or GDP, rate dropped from 12 to 9 percent over the past year.

The finance ministry said the policy led to about 5.6 million new taxpayers being added. And the Reserve Bank of India said new data showed that digital money transactions tripled.

But the opposition Congress party held demonstrations in major cities to protest what they believe is a failed policy. "It has ruined the lives of millions of hard-working Indians," the party's Vice President Rahul Gandhi said on Twitter.

The policy also affects people in neighboring Nepal. There, thousands of migrant workers held old currency notes that could not be exchanged before the date to do so passed.

Nepalese officials are currently seeking help from India to provide a way to exchange the nearly 55 million in Indian currency notes held by its citizens.

I'm Bryan Lynn.

Anjana Pasricha reported this story for VOA News. Bryan Lynn adapted it Learning English, with additional material from Reuters. Hai Do was the editor.

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Words in This Story

intend v. to plan or want to do (something): to have (something) in your mind as a purpose or goal

rid v. to cause (someone or something) to no longer have or be affected by (someone or something unwanted)

fakeadj. not true or real

currencyn. the money that a country uses: a specific kind of money

cashn. ready money; paper money and coins

data n. facts or information used usually to calculate, analyze, or plan something

digital adj. using or characterized by computer technology

recklessadj. doing something dangerous and not caring about what might happen

coerciveadj. using force to persuade people to do things they are unwilling to do

transactionn. a deal involving the buying or selling of something


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