Steve Forbes, the Editor-in-Chief of Forbes magazine on December 23, criticised the demonetisation move in an article by saying that it was a 'massive theft of people's property'. Here's what he had written.
By: FE Online | September 4, 2017
PM Narendra Modi’s
demonetisation move in November has come under the scanner once again
after the Reserve Bank of India released its Annual report. On November
8, the central government had scrapped Rs 500 and Rs 1,000 notes and
claimed that the decision would eradicate black money,
fake currency and corruption. When the bills went out of circulation,
the central bank issued Rs 2,000 notes and a new series of Rs 500 notes.
Meanwhile, the annual report by RBI
said that 99 percent of scrapped currency notes came back to the
banking system. Additionally, India’s GDP growth tumbled to 5.7 percent
in the April-June quarter this year, giving signs that the slowdown was
induced by demonetisation. Ever since the GDP data was released by
Ministry of Statistics came out, critics have been having a field day.
This also brings to light an article written by Steve Forbes, the
Editor-in-Chief of Forbes magazine on December 23, where he criticised
the demonetisation move by saying that it was a ‘massive theft of
people’s property’.
In his sharp attack on PM Modi’s demonetisation move, Steve Forbes
went all out and said what they have done to the money is “sickening and
immoral”. Forbes called the Indian bureaucracy to be ‘notorious’ for
corruption, red tape and lethargy. In the article, Forbes has given an
overview on how the demonetisation move was carried out by the
government; about the cash crunch, ATM queues, and the increase in
governmental control over lives. Here are the reasons why Forbes said,
what he said about Modi’s demonetisation move.
1. Forbes compared the decision with former Prime
Minister Indira Gandhi’s infamous sterilisation program in the 1970’s,
calling it Nazi-like eugenics. Forbes wrote: “Not since India’s
short-lived forced-sterilization program in the 1970s–this bout of
Nazi-like eugenics was instituted to deal with the country’s
“overpopulation”–has the government engaged in something so immoral.”
2. Forbes has criticised most of the narratives
which the government has been using to support the demonetisation move.
He also wrote about how businesses are closing as companies are not able
to pay their employees.
3. Forbes condemned the excessive rules and taxes
imposed by the Indian government, which he says is the reason of the
informal operation of a cash-based economy.
4. On the issue of terrorism, Forbes said that just a
currency change cannot stop terrorists from committing evil acts of
terror. Coming down heavily on the reasons cited by the Modi government
for the note ban, the magazine said: “Human nature hasn’t changed since
we began roaming this planet. “People will always find ways to engage in
wrongdoing. Terrorists aren’t about to quit their evil acts because of a
currency change.
5. On the issue of digitisation, he said that it will happen in a free market one way or the other, but it needs time.
6. Forbes suggested that India should get rid of
such a complex tax system, which is the main reason for tax evasion.
Forbes suggestion for India is, “…slash income and business tax rates
and simplify the whole tax structure; make the rupee as powerful as the
Swiss franc; hack away at regulations…”
7. Forbes lambasted the countries which have been
making similar moves like demonetisation by using the reasons provided
by the Indian government. He said that such a move is only about making
the government have more control over personal lives.
8. Forbes wrote: “India is the most extreme and
destructive example of the anti-cash fad currently sweeping governments
and the economics profession.” He added that India, apart from immorally
harming its own people, has also set a bad example for the rest of the
world.
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