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Successful Demonetisation To Help Increase Revenue In Long Run: World Bank

The Rs 500 and Rs 1,000 currency notes were pulled out from circulation on November 8 last year
The Rs 500 and Rs 1,000 currency notes were pulled out from circulation on November 8 last year

New Delhi: Successful demonetisation will help in raising revenues on sustained basis as more and more people will come under the tax net, according to a report by World Bank. During 2016-17, India generated additional tax revenues as unreported cash identified both through the amnesty scheme and demonetisation were brought under the tax net. Gross tax revenue, including the states' share, surpassed a budgeted target (of 10.8 per cent) at 11.3 per cent, which was mostly due to higher-than-expected excise collections on petroleum products.

Demonetisation had only a neutral effect on direct taxes, which fell within the budgeted target of 5.6 per cent of the gross domestic product (GDP), it said.

"Going forward revenues may increase permanently if demonetisation is successful in raising the amount of income reported to tax authorities," World Bank said in a chapter titled 'India's Great Currency Exchange' in its latest 'India Development Update'.

The government had on November 8 last year pulled out old Rs 500 and Rs 1,000 currency notes from circulation with immediate effect, which accounted to almost 86 per cent of cash in circulation.

The World Bank report is of the view that demonetisation has the potential to accelerate the formalisation of the economy.

Informal economy accounted for over half of India's GDP as of 2008-09 and 82 per cent of non-agricultural employment.

"Demonetisation promotes a reallocation of resources from the informal to the formal economy ... Many firms that had been reluctant to formalise now adopted digital payments, moving a step closer to formalisation, thanks to the demonetisation exercise," it added.

Formalisation is ultimately a positive transformation that can lead to greater efficiency, World Bank said, adding that India's low aggregate productivity is in part due to the prevalence of a large number of informal unproductive firms.

Still India needs to bring in complementary measures for ease of doing business to ensure that the new equilibrium of higher formalisation prevails.

"The smooth transition of Goods and Services Tax (GST) will be another major complementary reform to promote formalisation, as firms have a strong incentive to register with GST to obtain input tax credits," it added.