Demonetisation - India joins the Global 'War on Cash' to defeat Black Economy & Crimes
Demonetisation -
India joins the 'Global War on Cash' to defeat Black Economy & Crimes
India has banned current high value currency notes to initiate a was on cash to address illegal funding for criminal activities and black economy.
India is not the first country to initiate War on Cash.
Let’s us understand with a list of
examples from around the world of how cash payments are being regulated,
restricted and phased out.
If you have more information on any country please share...
Emergence of Cashless
Societies:
ARGENTINA – Argentina’s
currency crisis has been known for some time. In short, Argentinians don’t trust the peso and are willing to pay
premium for any currency they perceive as “more stable,” especially US dollars
which are traded on the black market as “blue dollars” at prices far exceeding the official exchange
rate.
Argentinian government mandated that banks report every credit card purchase
made in the country directly to the tax authorities and added a 15 percent tax surcharge every time a purchase is made
outside the country using a credit card issued by an Argentine bank.
AUSTRALIA – Over half (53 per cent) of
payments currently made in Australia are cashless. Australia will be cash free by 2022. Meanwhile, the government is readying a cashless welfare system that will allow the
government to control what the money is spent on.
BELGIUM – In 2014 the
Belgian government passed new restrictions on cash payments: cash can no longer be used
to pay for real estate, and there is a 3000 euro limit on cash payments for
other assets (unless purchase second hand).
CANADA – In 2007 the
Canadian government stopped allowing payment of taxes in cash at government
service centers. In 2010 Passport Canada followed suit. In 2011 56% of Canadians polled said they were
happy to live in a bankster-controlled cashless society so the country killed the penny in 2012 and the Royal Canadian Mint
started pimping the “MintChip” as a new form of electronic payment that will be
“better than cash.” The Mint ended the program in 2014 but the Great White North
is still on track to be a cashless society in the coming
years.
CHINA – The
People’s Bank of China, citing the need to “reduce costs, curb crimes and money
laundry, facilitate transactions and boost central bank’s control on money
supply and circulation” set up a research team in 2014 “to study application
scenarios for digital currency and strive for an early rollout.”
DENMARK – In the
1990s about 80% of Danish retail purchases were made with cash, but these days
it’s more like 25%. But if the Danish government has its way, that number will be 0% by 2030. That’s the year the Danish
government has set for the complete elimination of paper money in Denmark.
ECUADOR – Last year
Ecuador became the first government to launch a digital currency completely administered and
controlled by a central bank. Called the Dinero Electronico,
the currency can be purchased with cash, stored in electronic wallets on a
phone, and can be exchanged by text message.
EU – The head of the EU Anti-Fraud
Office Giovanni Kessler, came out earlier this year to call for abolishing the 500 euro note because they “can
make the life of fraudsters much easier.” He also noted that a more widespread
adoption of electronic payment systems would be better for his office
because “Traceability is paramount in fighting corruption and fraud.”
FRANCE – In the wake
of the Charlie Hebdo attacks last year, the French government stepped up its
war on cash. In March of last year, French Finance Minister Michel Sapin declared it necessary to “fight against the use of cash
and anonymity in the French economy” in order to combat “low-cost terrorism.”
As of September 2015 it is illegal for French citizens to make purchases exceeding 1000 euros in
cash.
GERMANY – In a rather
abrupt turnaround from a 2014 Bundesbank paper on “The Irreplaceability of Cash,” the German Finance Ministry
(perhaps egged on by the country’s leading Keynesian economist) is
looking into a 5000 euro cap on all cash payments. And although Germany
is still a cash-based society, things are changing; a 2014 survey found that 34% of the population makes
purchases electronically already and 20% can envision making all their
purchases via smartphone payment systems in the future.
HONG KONG – When it
launched in 1997, the Hong Kong Mass Transit Railway’s Octopus Card was
just the second contactless smart card system in the world (after South Korea’s
UPass). Although originally used to pay for journeys on public transit, it can
now be used at convenience stores, vending machines, supermarkets, photo booths
and other retail outlets. In 2004 all metered parking spaces in Hong Kong
were converted to cashless meters that required Octopus Cards
for payment.
INDIA – India is
one of the most cash-dependent economies in the world with a cash-to-GDP ratio of 12%, almost four times that of fellow
BRICS nations Brazil and South Africa. But it won’t be for long if the
Indian government has its way. Last June the Indian Ministry of Finance posted
a draft proposal to its website for facilitating the rise
of cashless payments in the country. In his 2015 budget speech the Finance
Minister declared: “One way to curb the flow of black money is to
discourage transactions in cash. Now that a majority of Indians has or can
have, a RUPAY debit card. I therefore, proposes to introduce soon several
measure that will incentivize credit or debit card transactions and
disincentivize cash transaction.”
IRELAND – A 2013 paper from the Central Bank of Ireland lamented
Ireland’s slow adoption of electronic payments and over-reliance on cheques,
noting “Ireland could save up to €1bn per year by migrating to more efficient
[i.e. electronic] payment instruments.” Later that year, the Central Bank
launched a National Payments plan to help facilitate the transition
and kicked off a €1m national marketing campaign to encourage the migration to
electronic payments. The scale of the campaign surprised many, with the Irish Independent pointing out that “It’s a major
advertising spend in the current climate, where a big-promotion budget spend is
considered to be in the region of €500,000 outside of the big global
blue-chips.” Late last year the Cork City Centre Forum attempted to take the
lead in the cashless transition by launching the “Cork Cash Out” campaign aiming “to encourage consumers to ween
off cash and opt-in for electronic-only transactions instead.”
ISRAEL – In 2014 a
special committee headed by Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s Chief
of Staff Harel Locker released a report examining how to reduce the use of cash in the
country. The report advocates reforms (including restrictions and limits on
cash transactions) as part of a strategy whose aim is “reduced use of cash,
reduced use of endorsed checks, and increased use of electronic means
of payment.”
ITALY – In 2011
newly appointed Italian Prime Minister Mario Monti made cash payments over 1000 euro illegal. “What we need is a
revolution in Italians’ thinking” Monti told reporters as he announced the
emergency decree which was put into law before it was even formally voted on in
parliament.
KENYA – Last year
the Kenyan government awarded a contract to MasterCard to administer a smart
card that can be used to pay for government services and receive welfare
payments. Anne Waiguru of the Ministry of Devolution and Planning explained:
“Uwezo Fund beneficiaries, Youth and Women Funds disbursements, National Youth
Service, Social welfare government cash transfers to families, government food
subsidies, hunger safety net cash transfers and cash transfers to orphaned
children will be disbursed through the cards,” neglecting to add that the card
also gives MasterCard access to the biometric details of 170 million potential
customers.
MEXICO – In 2013 the
Mexican government banned cash payments of more than 500,000 pesos for real
estate and more than 200,000 pesos for cars, jewelry or lottery tickets.
NETHERLANDS – In 2013 the
mayors of Almere, Rotterdam and Maastricht engaged in a publicity stunt to promote a campaign
encouraging the public to abandon cash. They spent a week without spending any
cash, relying solely on debit cards for purchases. The campaign is part of
a long term trend away from cash and toward debit payments
in many supermakets and other businesses around the country.
NORWAY – Late last
week Trond Bentestuen, a senior executive at Norway’s largest bank, complained to the VG Newspaper that the Norwegian central
bank “can only account for 40 percent” of the Norwegian kroner in circulation,
meaning “that 60 percent of money usage is outside of any control.” There’s
only one conclusion, according to Bentestuen: “There are so many dangers and
disadvantages associated with cash, we have concluded that it should be phased
out.” Don’t worry, though, the nation’s Finance Ministry says it has “no plans
to change the law in this area”…for now.
PHILIPPINES – In the
Phillippines, the government has launched an
“E-Peso” project with the explicit aim of “transforming
communities into cashless societies.” Touted as “a digital/virtual currency
based on the Philippine Peso” its main selling point (according to the E-Peso’s own website) is that: “Since
E-Peso transactions are completely digital, everything will automatically be
recorded onto the customer’s account activity log.”
SAUDI ARABIA – A
MasterCard report on “The Cashless
Journey” noted that by increasing the share of debit card
transactions in the economy between 2006 and 2011, Saudi Arabia was moving at a
faster than average pace toward a cashless society. Commenting on the report,
Khalid Hariry of MasterCard noted: “Saudi Arabia is indeed moving at a better than average
pace on its cashless journey, which has been significantly spurred along by
government leadership. Regulation mandating wages assignment of employees’ to
bank accounts has vastly increased access to electronic payment methods for the
Saudi population over a short period of time. These changes, coming alongside
initiatives to spur acceptance, and a push to migrate payments made during the
Hajj and Umrah pilgrimages, can be expected to shift substantial share of
consumer payments away from cash in the coming years.”
SPAIN – Citing
budgetary austerity and the need to clamp down on tax fraud the Spanish
government banned cash payments of more than 2,500 euros in 2012.
SWEDEN – Stockholm’s KTH Royal Institute of Technology released a report stating that the country is on track to
completely eliminating cash transactions in the foreseeable future. Noting that
there are now only 80 billion Swedish crowns in circulation in the economy
(down from 106 just six years ago), the report highlights how digital
person-to-person payment technology “Swish” (developed in collaboration with
Danish banks) is already transforming the country’s banking sector, where there
are now entire banks that do not accept cash. Meanwhile, the Swedish public is
being urged to stop using cash by no less a cultural icon than ABBA’s Björn Ulveaus, who brags that the ABBA museum is now a
cashless institution.
URUGUAY – Under the
“Financial Inclusion Law” which took effect in May 2015 the Uruguayan
government has banned all cash payments over $5,000, thus requiring all
property and vehicle purchases to go through the banking system. This is part
of a wave of such legislation throughout Latin America hailed as a way of
“giving the people what they need” (i.e. access to banking) even when (as the very same report notes) “those on the edges of the
financial system are distrustful of banks” especially in Uruguay.
UK – In 2014 cashless payments surpassed cash payments for the first
time in the UK, with research (from cashless payment provider Kalixo Pro) suggesting that the average Brit only carries £17.79 in
cash at any time and 1 in 4 will walk away if a business doesn’t accept card
payment. London buses went cashless in
2014 and just last year the Bank of England’s chief
economist made the case for negative interest rates and abolishing
cash.
India has just started the journey in the same direction i,e Cashless society by launching a war on cash.
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