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WHAT IS A CASHLESS ECONOMY AND WHERE DOES INDIA STAND? AND ITS BENEFITS

Introduction

India continues to be driven by the use of cash; less than 5% of all payments happen electronically however the finance minister, in 2016 budget speech, talked about the idea of making India a cashless society, with the aim of curbing the flow of black money.

Even the RBI has also recently unveiled unveiled a document — “Payments and Settlement Systems in India: Vision 2018” — setting out a plan to encourage electronic payments and to enable India to move towards a cashless society or economy in the medium and long term.

What is a cashless economy and where does India stand?

  • A cashless economy is one in which all the transactions are done using cards or digital means. The circulation of physical currency is minimal.
  • India uses too much cash for transactions. The ratio of cash to gross domestic product is one of the highest in the world—12.42% in 2014, compared with 9.47% in China or 4% in Brazil.
  • Less than 5% of all payments happen electronically
  • The number of currency notes in circulation is also far higher than in other large economies. India had 76.47 billion currency notes in circulation in 2012-13 compared with 34.5 billion in the US.
  • Some studies show that cash dominates even in malls, which are visited by people who are likely to have credit cards, so it is no surprise that cash dominates in other markets as well.

Benefits of Cashless economy

  • Reduced instances of tax avoidance because it is financial institutions based economy where transaction trails are left.
  • It will curb generation of black money
  • Will reduce real estate prices because of curbs on black money as most of black money is invested in Real estate prices which inflates the prices of Real estate markets
  • In Financial year 2015, RBI spent Rs 27 billion on just the activity of currency issuance and management. This could be avoided if we become cashless society.
  • It will pave way for universal availability of banking services to all as no physical infrastructure is needed other than digital.
  • There will be greater efficiency in welfare programmes as money is wired directly into the accounts of recipients. Thus once money is transferred directly into a beneficiary’s bank account, the entire process becomes transparent. Payments can be easily traced and collected, and corruption will automatically drop, so people will no longer have to pay to collect what is rightfully theirs.
  • There will be efficiency gains as transaction costs across the economy should also come down.
  • 1 in 7 notes is supposed to be fake, which has a huge negative impact on economy, by going cashless, that can be avoided.
  • Hygiene – Soiled, tobacco stained notes full of germs are a norm in India. There are many such incidents in our life where we knowingly or unknowingly give and take germs in the form of rupee notes. This could be avoided if we move towards Cashless economy.
  • In a cashless economy there will be no problem of soiled notes or counterfeit currency
  • Reduced costs of operating ATMs.
  • Speed and satisfaction of operations for customers, no delays and queues, no interactions with bank staff required.
  • A Moody’s report pegged the impact of electronic transactions to 0.8% increase in GDP for emerging markets and 0.3% increase for developed markets because of increased velocity of money

An increased use of credit cards instead of cash would primarily enable a more detailed record of all the transactions which take place in the society, allowing more transparency in business operations and money transfers.

This will eventually have the following chain effect:

  1. Improvement in credit access and financial inclusion, which will benefit the growth of SMEs in the medium/long run.
  2. Reduce tax avoidance and money laundering thanks to the higher traceability of all the transactions.
  3. The increased use of credit cards will definitely reduce the amount of cash that people will carry and as a consequence, reduce the risk and the cost associated with that.