Newsweek

How India's Cashless Economy Gambit Backfired

Modi's plan to root out corruption and tax evasion could end in a terrible recession.
A taxi driver pleads in front of a gas station attendant to accept a 500 rupees currency note in New Delhi, India, November 9. Indians awoke to confusion after the government withdrew the highest-denomination currency notes overnight to halt money laundering in a country where many still make day-to-day transactions in cash.
12_09_India_01

On November 8, when Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi announced a surprise recall of more than 80 percent of the country’s cash in circulation, his supporters hailed the measure as an ingenious “surgical strike” against corruption and tax evasion. Everyone else was too busy running to the ATM.

Before the move, Modi had made little progress in fulfilling his campaign promise to bring back billions in untaxed “black money” stashed abroad so he could deposit it in the bank accounts of India’s poor. Washington, D.C.–based corruption watchdog Global Financial Integrity recently estimated that an average of $50 billion a year in illicit funds flowed out of India from 2004 to 2013, while bureaucrats, politicians and business tycoons amassed huge fortunes from influence peddling, backroom deals and outright graft.

Some Indians were so disgusted by this corruption that, much like Donald Trump’s supporters

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