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Our Prime Minister has a way with words and needs no Goebbels to help him put an appropriately seductive spin on the witchcraft that statecraft has been reduced to. What began as a surgical strike against black money is now a massive Yagna – a passage through fire we must all forcibly go through to learn how to behave in a clean ‘cashless’ society, which is the new normal.
It does not matter that the caches of dirty cash that were expected to be left behind by the fleeing marauders could not really be found and those that did exist have easily and swiftly found their way into millions of conveniently available zero balance laundry accounts as though designed and created precisely for that purpose. New? No, washed in Surf.
Only this prime minister has had the courage to punch so hard, we were told. Any short-term setback to the economy will be more than made up by the windfall the RBI will receive – a part of which will be redistributed a la Robin Hood to all the 250 million PMJDY accounts and another part will be used to create spanking new, smart infrastructure.
If we raised our eyebrows, questioned the prudence and effectiveness of this buccaneering approach to governance, we were told that we were smarting because we were caught unprepared. This is just the first blow and there will be a slew of reforms aimed at unearthing black wealth – whether stored in real estate or gold or secret foreign accounts. Just wait and see.
Now that we know that most of the black cash that was expected to be ‘extinguished’ is back and does not look very black any more, we are being told that ‘extinguishing’ anything and getting windfall gains was never the idea.
Demonetisation has now become a massive ‘yagna’ to help create a clean ‘cashless’ society.
The new narrative is that getting money back into the banking system and not ‘extinguishing’ black money was always the plan
Demonetisation has unwittingly or otherwise, opened up opportunities for corruption in the guise of fighting corruption.
Becoming a cashless economy does not make the economy clean or more ethical.
Demonetisation does not hit the corrupt hard. It only makes him more ingenious and creative in his corruption.
Getting everything back into the banking system was apparently the purpose so that all the tax hounds who have been straining at the leash can be let loose and sniff out the black from all those 250 million new accounts. Nothing is black or white until Big Brother declares it to be so.
The perversity of this exercise is breathtakingly audacious. We know that the smart black income earner does not store his illicit gains in cash. He spirits it away through a labyrinth of underground digital passages into tax havens abroad, or he buys properties in Mayfair and Kensington Palace Gardens, or buys gold and diamonds. He keeps a small part in cash as his spending money or he supplements his working capital to buy and sell.
So what will happen to all the 13 lakh crore (and more to come) which has come back into the system? First, a whole new window will have opened up for the taxman, the bank manager and their friend in the RBI and MOF to expand their rent seeking and extortion opportunities to hitherto undreamt of levels. Armed with Big Data and new algorithms, the extortion capacity increases manifold.
We always forget that corruption is directly and causally related to the opportunities that the coercive power of the State provides. More the government, more its policing powers, more the corruption. So whether or not the prime minister advises his taxmen to be soft and considerate, he has, unwittingly or otherwise, opened up opportunities for corruption in the guise of fighting corruption. The corruption of anti-corruption. The ultimate perversity.
Second, that demonetisation hits the corrupt hard. It does nothing of the kind. It only makes him more ingenious and creative in his corruption. It hits the honest and the poor hard.
(The author is a former IAS officer. This article first appeared as a Facebook post on the author’s timeline. The views expressed above are of the author’s alone and The Quint neither endorses nor is responsible for the same.)
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