- It was comparable to a 2 percentage point tightening in the key policy rate and reduced economic activity by at least 3 percentage points in the months immediately after.
- However, the decline in output was relatively smaller and wasn’t fully seen in national gross domestic data, given that these numbers don’t completely capture India’s vast informal economy.
- They called for deeper evaluations of the long-term consequences of demonetization.
- The move supported the Chartalist School, which holds that there are crucial differences between currencies in an economy.
- The withdrawal of so-called Fiat Money, which is currency issued by a government, reduced the availability of Commodity Money, which is used in trade and commerce.
- The gap could not be filled by Managed Money, the term used for organized finance, because a large portion of the population lacked bank accounts and the government was slow in replacing currency bills.
- It’s clear policy makers didn’t consider how money interacts in India, they wrote. “Was it bad implementation of good policy or bad implementation of bad policy? It was both.”
- The economic impact was felt most acutely in relatively “unbanked” and cash-dependent areas.
- Still in elections held soon after, Modi’s Bharatiya Janata Party was penalized the least in relatively unbanked districts. This shows that a substantial share of voters supported demonetization despite its negative economic effects.
- If Modi hadn’t framed demonetization as a fight against corruption, there might have been a loss of support to the BJP.
- The markets always knew that demonetization would have only a “modest at best” impact on curbing corruption.
- “There is little evidence that sectors thought to be associated with greater tax evasion or corruption experienced significantly different returns.”
- However, banks gained as investors penciled in the prospect of bigger deposits and state-owned firms also rose. The latter may be due to perceptions of future corruption at government-backed firms that are seen as particularly prone to graft.
- Implementation of the policy was marked by chaos and confusion as policy makers announced and revised decisions daily.
- When there is common knowledge about how information is delivered -- press conferences from distant Delhi, in the case of demonetization -- providing more people with information deters their willingness to ask questions and can actually reduce knowledge.
- India has the largest growing middle class in the world, which was largely isolated from the last major economic crisis in 1991. But demonetization directly hit their lives.
- “These woes range from the panic and anxiety in the initial few weeks from the many announcements that followed, to acute psychotic episodes.”
- They shared six case details from a single clinic in Bengaluru, including:
- An entrepreneur who feared he was being persecuted
- A homemaker who was worried she’d be penalized for the cash she’d saved
- An indebted film producer died weeks after he complained his phones were tapped
- A police officer who was diagnosed as suicidal
- “The people who were affected are seemingly not directly linked to black money,” the researchers said, using the colloquial term for cash stashed away illegally. “Some of their annual incomes did not even reach the tax-paying slab.”
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