Demonetisation rollout 'deeply flawed', Rs 2,000 notes launch puzzling, says Nobel laureate Richard Thaler
Demonetisation
rollout 'deeply flawed', Rs 2,000 notes launch puzzling, says Nobel laureate
Richard Thaler
Nobel laureate economist Richard Thaler has clarified that
demonetisation of high value currencies per se is a good move, but the way it
was done by Prime Minister Narendra Modi is "deeply flawed".
Thaler clarified his stance to his student Swaraj Kumar in
an email exchange, which both of them tweeted.
“The concept was good as a move to a cashless society to
impede corruption but the rollout was deeply flawed and the introduction of the
Rs 2000 note makes the motivation for the entire exercise puzzling,” Thaler
told Kumar.
Thaler won the Nobel prize for economics this year. Soon
after the announcement, Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) leaders had claimed on
Twitter that Thaler had supported the demonetisation of Rs 500 and Rs 1,000
notes announced by Modi on 8 November, 2016. However, even then it turned out
that though in principle he supported such a move towards cashless economy, he
had reservations about introduction of Rs 2,000 notes.
Now, with the latest development, it is clear that Thaler
never supported Modi's drive and even considered it deeply flawed.
The move had sucked out 86 percent of the currency in
circulation and even resulted in deaths and depression among citizens. The
slowdown in the economy has been partly attributed to the ban on notes which
crippled the small-scale sector.
The introduction of Rs 2,000 notes has been criticised by
many experts earlier too. A section of the economists questioned the very
objective of the move asking if Rs 2,000 notes are being introduced, how would
ban on Rs 500 and Rs 1,000 notes be effective.
According to media reports, soon after the ban announcement,
the government's note printing presses worked overtime to print the Rs 2,000
notes. The idea was to meet the demand for currencies at the earliest.
However, that did not help the people as they were stuck
with the high value note as there were not enough lower denominations
available.
However, the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) has now stopped
printing Rs 2000 notes, with the focus shifting to lower denominations.
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