Narendra Modi’s war on cash needed a different approach
2 min read 20 Dec 2016, 08:30 AM ISTNarendra Modi's government could still meet its goal of a 'less-cash' society if physical money were to be gradually replaced by a national digital currency

Singapore: As India continues its scorched-earth campaign against cash, the question baffling many analysts is why a country so unfamiliar with digital payments would outlaw 86% of its currency, the most-favoured method of settling transactions.
Beyond showing the enormity of the challenge facing Prime Minister Narendra Modi, these statistics are of little relevance now. What’s done is done. With Modi asking people to embrace electronic payments as a way of life, investors want to know what shape these digital networks will take, and who’ll own them: banks, or non-banks such as telcos and e-wallet apps? Either party’s dominance will be wholly artificial.
The Tufts researchers see it differently. India, they say, has erred in choosing a bank-led model over a telecoms-led one. “Consumers have been left unaware of how they might use mobile phones for services other than communications, texting, or Facebook."
It’s true that India doesn’t have anything like China’s Tenpay, controlled by Tencent Holdings Ltd, which runs the WeChat social network, or its larger rival Alipay, owned by Alibaba Group Holding Ltd’s banking and payments affiliate, Ant Financial. Paytm, the most popular Indian wallet, is tiny versus Ant, which services 450 million customers in China and was valued by CLSA at $75 billion in September.
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Although the Indian start-up has witnessed explosive growth since the government’s 8 November currency ban, tapping opportunities isn’t proving to be easy. Paytm launched an in-store payment app last month, only to withdraw it amid security concerns.
Paypal-style wallets, which customers fill from their bank accounts, won’t pose too serious a challenge to traditional lenders. But Paytm, as well as mobile operators Bharti Airtel Ltd and Reliance Industries Ltd, are close to establishing so-called payment banks that can accept customer deposits so long as they only invest in government bonds and don’t make loans.
These newer payment systems could have an edge over ATMs and cards from commercial lenders. The latter are simply too smug. Even basic maintenance of infrastructure—like switching ATMs out of Windows XP, which is no longer supported by Microsoft Corp.—is a cost that full-service banks in India avoid incurring, blithely ignoring the security risks.
But with both banks and telcos suffering from a deficit of trust and access, neither should be the No. 1 choice for replacing cash. The only institution whose balance sheet people actually want is the one they’ve always used to settle transactions: the Reserve Bank of India.
That’s not such a bad thing. The government could still meet its goal of a “less-cash" society if physical money were to be gradually replaced by a national digital currency, whose lawful use would be certified by a network of distributed ledgers. It would be an official bitcoin, or BharatCoin, as some commentators have called it.
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The central bank’s balance sheet is already available to the butcher, the baker and the candlestick maker, but only via cash. RBI has no idea who owns its currency. With BharatCoin, it would know the identity of owners, though transactions would be scrambled for privacy. As Gadfly’s Tim Culpan and Christopher Langner have noted, the goal of a national digital currency is to take “the banking out of cash."
Even at the Bank of England, the idea is still just a research project. If Modi had embraced it, the pain of demonetisation would have become unnecessary. Given people’s preferences, it’s still not too late to consider. Bloomberg