The Big Reverse

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The Big Reverse Page 27

by Meera Sanyal

RTGS and NEFT systems

  Rupees 2,000 notes released after demonetization

  Rupia

  Sahu, Udit

  SAIF Mauritius

  SAIF Partners India Pvt. Ltd

  Sainath, P.

  Sales Tax

  Santayana, George

  Sarabhai, Mallika

  Sassoon docks

  savings and investment, impact of demonetization

  Saw Maung, General

  Sayyed, nazim

  Scandinavian socialist economic model

  Schacht, Hjalmar

  secondary steel industry, impact of demonetization

  Sen, Amartya

  Sen, Pronab

  Shagari, Shehu

  Shah, Ajay

  Shah, Amit

  Shah, Jignesh

  Sharma, Vijay Shekhar

  Sharvan, a Dalit worker

  Sheriff, S.K.

  shipbreaking activity

  Siddiqui, Mannan

  Silk Road

  Singh, Sukhdev

  Sinha, Yashwant

  small manufacturers

  small retailers and traders, impact of demonetization

  smuggling

  Snyder, Scott

  Sonar, Suresh

  Song dynasty (960–1279 CE)

  Soviet Union and Russia:

  breakup

  Demonetizations of 1991, 1993 and 1998

  Specified Bank Notes Cessation of Liabilities Ordinance

  Sri Lanka (Ceylon); demonetization

  Standing Orders by Department of Economic Affairs (DEA)

  start-ups in the telecom business

  State Bank of India’s (SBI)

  Ecowrap, April 2016

  State Bank of Mysore

  Steffeck, Fraulein

  sting operations and raids

  sting operations by TV channels

  Stresemann, Gustav

  Subbarao, Duvvuri

  Subramanian, Arvind

  Summers, Lawrence

  Sundaresan

  Suri, Sher Shah

  Sutela, Pekka

  Swamy, Subramanian

  Tamaliya, Tejabhai

  Tata Consultancy Services (TCS)

  tax avoidance, tax evasion

  Tax base, expansion

  tax penalties

  Taylor, Brian

  tea gardens and workers, impact of demonetization

  Terror Funding and Fake Currency Cell (TFFC)

  terrorism

  terrorist attack on Mumbai (26/11/2008)

  terrorist financing

  textile industry: cotton farmers, weavers, mills, looms and textile merchants, impact of demonetization

  Thakur, Justices T.S.

  Thengue, Anju

  Thorat, Usha

  Tirrihannah Tea Estate

  Topno, Noel

  tourism and those dependent on it, impact of demonetization

  transparency

  Transparency International

  tribal communities, impact of demonetization

  Trump, Donald

  Tshisekedi, Etienne

  Tughlaq, Muhammad bin

  2G Scam

  Tyagi, Mukesh

  U Nu

  under-invoicing and over-invoicing

  Underprint series notes

  unemployment

  Unified Payments Interface (UPI)

  United Forum of Reserve Bank Officers and Employees

  United Front

  United Nations

  United Nations System of National Accounts

  United Progressive Alliance (UPA), 135; II

  United States: presidential election, Clinton vs. Trump, 2; terrorists’ attack, 9/11

  Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act

  Uttar Pradesh elections

  Vaidyanath Urban Cooperative Bank, Maharashtra

  Vajpayee, Atal Bihari

  Varma, Amit

  VAT

  Venture Capital Fund SAIF

  Verveer, Melanne

  Victoria Portrait series notes

  Vijayakumar

  Virmani, Arvind

  Vishwanathan, N.S.

  Voluntary Disclosure Schemes

  Vyas, Mahesh

  Wanchoo Committee

  Wanchoo, Kailas Nath

  weighted average lending rate (WALR)

  Weimar Republic

  West African Currency Board (WACB)

  Wilhelm II, German Emperor

  women’s self-help groups

  World Bank

  World War I

  World War II

  Yechury, Sitaram

  Yelstin, Boris

  Yuan dynasty

  Zaire: demonetization

  Acknowledgements

  For this book, I owe many my thanks.

  First and foremost, to my family, who took turns in encouraging me to persist every time I hit a writer’s block.

  To my husband, Ashish, who would thoughtfully remind me every day, to get a little done and inspire me with the discipline he brought to writing his own book Heritage Retailers of Bombay. To my mother, Banu, for her unwavering support and encouragement, and her daily morning prayers that have blessed and protected me. To my brother, Manik, who gave me haven in his tranquil home by the river Pampa in Kerala, where much of this book was written – which sadly was submerged and badly damaged in the recent deluge – as also for his valuable inputs. And above all, to my children, Priyadarshini and Jai, who helped me edit and format the book, to make it both crisper and more comprehensible.

  Much of the pleasure in writing this book came from trying to unravel the mystery behind the unanswered questions of India’s 2016 demonetization. There was a wealth of information available – the challenge was to try and join the dots, to sift rumour from fact, and to identify meaningful data that could present a factual and objective picture of the events and outcomes of this move.

  For this, I would like to acknowledge the individuals and institutions from which I drew much of my information and data.

  First and foremost, my thanks to senior former officials of the RBI, whom I have taken the liberty of quoting: ex-Governors Dr Bimal Jalan, Dr Rangarajan, Dr Y.V. Reddy, Dr Duvvuri Subbarao, Dr Raghuram G. Rajan and ex-Deputy Governors Dr K.C. Chakrabarty and Mrs Usha Thorat.

  I am just as grateful to the Reserve Bank of India for their excellent website, Annual Reports, Mint Street Memos, Macroeconomic Assessments, and data base, from where I was able to get a great deal of valuable information.

  Data was also drawn from the Economic Survey 2018, MoSPI website and press releases, Workdbank.org, the ILER report for IHD, Investopaedia, AIMO, Research Unit for Political Economy (RUPE), The Quarterly Employment Survey prepared by the Ministry of Labour and Employment, Transparency International website and their CPI report, the National Crime Records Bureau, the South Asia Terrorism Portal created and maintained by the Institute for Conflict Management, the Central Board of Direct Taxes (CBDT) and National Sample Survey Office (NSSO) data.

  My particular thanks to Soumya Kanti Ghosh and his team at State Bank of India (SBI), whose SBI Ecowrap reports were a very useful source of information, and to Mahesh Vyas and his team at Centre for Monitoring Indian Economy (CMIE) whose data was invaluable.

  As the 2016 demonetization dominated media space, there were numerous excellent articles by journalists both in mainstream print media and online media. I owe sincere thanks to the journalists and publications from whom I have quoted in the book – Firstpost, India Today, Mint, The Indian Express, The Times of India, Business Standard, the Hindustan Times, The Hindu, Business Today, The Wire, India Spend, Scroll.in; to the websites of Village Square, PARI, LiveLaw, Perfectsourcing and Steelworld; and foreign publications such as The Economist, The Wall Street Journal, Forbes magazine and The New York Times.

  Thanks are also due to news agencies PTI and IANS and TV channels TV Today, CNN IBN, ABP News and Zee News.

  My special thanks to Salil Tripathi and Paranjoy Guha Thakurta for their valuab
le inputs.

  I have had to draw from both the RBI archives and numerous foreign publications and authors. Articles and interviews quoted have been gratefully acknowledged.

  The commentary on demonetization was made much richer by the expert comments of several distinguished bankers and economists. I have taken the liberty of quoting, with respect and gratitude, the words of the former Prime Minister Dr Manmohan Singh, Nobel laureate Dr Amartya Sen, Dr Jagdish Bhagwati, Dr Arvind Virmani, Dr Bibek Debroy, Dr Kaushik Basu, Amit Verma, Devangshu Datta, Ajay Shah, Dr Pronab Sen, Prof. Arun Kumar, Prof. Pulapre Balakrishnan, Captain Raghu Raman, Dr Ajit Mozoomdar, Neelkanth Mishra, and Prof. Himanshu.

  Two experts to whom I owe special thanks are James Wilson and Vivek Kaul, whose detailed and insightful articles and blogs through the course of the demonetization period and its aftermath, helped to make sense of all the contradictory data that was appearing.

  The demonetization had many tragic and unfortunate outcomes. The office of the Chief Minister of West Bengal had documented the deaths attributed to this move. My sincere thanks to Derek O’Brien, Member of Parliament and Chief Spokesperson of the All India Trinamool Congress, for sharing the list of the 120 demonetization deaths.

  Despite the havoc wreaked by demonetization, India never lost its sense of humour. They say a picture speaks a thousand words. Cartoons by India’s talented cartoonists managed to evoke a smile despite all the chaos. My deep and sincere thanks to the many cartoonists who inspired me, especially Satish Acharya.

  My learnings and perspectives have been shaped by the experiences in my banking career and my two Lok Sabha campaigns. For these, I owe thanks to numerous colleagues, mentors, bosses, volunteers, supporters and friends, whom I request to forgive me for not mentioning them individually by name; my journey would have been incomplete without your encouragement, guidance and support, for which I will always be deeply grateful.

  Last, but not least, my thanks to my publishers Sachin Sharma and Krishan Chopra at HarperCollins. The idea of this book was theirs, and from our first meeting in December 2016, they have been unwavering in their support. I would also thank my copy-editor, Nandakumar K., for his diligence and incisive comments.

  Meera H. Sanyal

  3 September 2018

  About the Book

  8 NOVEMBER 2016 WAS A BLACK SWAN EVENT IN INDIAN HISTORY.

  At one stroke, 86 per cent of the currency in circulation was demonetized, causing confusion, chaos and endless misery to the common Indian. While the Modi government claimed that it was the silver bullet that India needed to eliminate many of its long-standing problems, such as black money, corruption, tax evasion and terror funding, the months that followed proved it otherwise.

  The return of 99.7 per cent of the banned 500-rupee and 1,000-rupee notes showed that the idea of a Demonetization Dividend was nothing but a mirage. As a result of demonetization, livelihoods of millions in the informal sector were destroyed, causing enormous distress to farmers and traders and forcing many micro, small and medium businesses into bankruptcy. Economic growth slid to as low as 5.6 per cent in the quarter through June 2017. In fact, all claims by the government fell flat.

  One of India’s most respected bankers, Meera H. Sanyal provides a comprehensive analysis of the policy, its execution and its pitfalls. The Big Reverse presents unprecedented insights backed by data, history and research. And answers the questions that still continue to haunt Indians on the what, why and how of demonetization.

  About the Author

  Meera Sanyal is one of India’s most respected bankers. She relinquished her job as CEO and chairperson of Royal Bank of Scotland, India, to enter public service in December 2013.

  In a banking career spanning thirty years, Meera worked with ABN AMRO Bank/The Royal Bank of Scotland for twenty-one years in diverse roles. She was COO for the Asia Pacific region, head of corporate finance advisory for Asia, founder and CEO of ACES, the bank’s global ITeS company, and head of its investment bank in India. She mentored the bank’s micro-finance programme that financed over 6,50,000 rural women and chaired the bank’s foundation that provided livelihood assistance to 75,000 women-led households in threatened ecosystems. Her prior experience was with Lazard and with Grindlays Bank.

  Meera is a member of the International Board of Right to Play, a board member of LiberalsIndia for Good Governance (a continuation of the Indian Liberal Group), and sits on the supervisory board of Jai Hind College. She is a founding member of APLI Mumbai, a citizens’ movement for the regeneration of Mumbai’s PortLands and a more livable Mumbai. Meera is also a member of Hillary Clinton’s International Council on Women’s Business Leadership.

  She stood for the Mumbai South Lok Sabha seat in 2009 as an independent candidate, and in 2014 as the Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) candidate. She is a member of AAP’s National Executive Committee. Meera helped lead the Delhi dialogue which was the basis of the party’s manifesto for the Delhi state elections. The party would go on to win with an absolute majority in 2015.

  Meera was awarded the Philanthropist of the Year award by FICCI, Woman Banker of the Year award by the Indian Merchants Chamber, the Woman of Substance award by the Rotary Club, and the Karmaveer Puraskaar, a national people’s award instituted by iCONGO, a countrywide confederation of NGOs, for her work in social development.

  Meera is an MBA from INSEAD, France, and has completed the Advanced Management Programme at Harvard Business School. She is a fellow of the Chartered Institute of Bankers (UK).

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  First published in India in 2018 by Harper Business

  An imprint of HarperCollins Publishers

  A-75, Sector 57, Noida, Uttar Pradesh 201301, India

  www.harpercollins.co.in

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  Copyright © Meera H. Sanyal 2018

  P-ISBN: 978-93-5302-394-2

  Epub Edition © October 2018 ISBN: 978-93-5302-395-9

  The views and opinions expressed in this book are the author’s own and the facts are as reported by him, and the publishers are not in any way liable for the same.

  Though every effort has been made to trace sources for quoted text, it has not been possible to do so in all cases. Any omissions brought to our notice will be rectified in future editions

  Meera H. Sanyal asserts the moral right to be identified as the author of this work.

  All rights reserved under The Copyright Act, 1957. By payment of the required fees, you have been granted the nonexclusive, nontransferable right to access and read the text of this ebook on-screen. No part of this text may be reproduced, transmitted, downloaded, decompiled, reverse-engineered, or stored in or introduced into any information storage and retrieval system, in any form or by any means, whether electronic or mechanical, now known or hereinafter invented, without the express written permission of HarperCollins Publishers India.

  Cover design: Saurabh Garge

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