Skip to main content

Calling noteban immoral, Forbes likens it with Sanjay Gandhi's "Nazi-like eugenics" to control overpopulation

Sanjay Gandhi
By A Representative
Forbes, the world's prestigious business magazines, has characterized Prime Minister Narendra Modi's note-ban move as an “awful act” which is “breathtaking in its immorality”, adding, “What India has done is commit a massive theft of people's property without even the pretense of due process – a shocking move for a democratically elected government.”
Comparing Modi's demonetization move with Sanjay Gandhi-inspired "nasbandi", the top New York-based journal says, “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.”
Disputing Modi claims that the move will fight corruption and tax evasion by flushing out illegal cash, crippling criminal enterprises and terrorists and force-marching India into a digitized credit system”, Forbes says, “Terrorists aren't about to quit their evil acts because of a currency change.”
Further, it says, “As for the digitization of money, it will happen in its own good time if free markets are permitted. And the best cure for tax evasion is a flat tax or, at the least, a simple, low-rate tax system that renders tax evasion hardly worth the effort. Make it easy to do business legally and most people will do just that.”
Underlining that “governments don't create resources, people do”, Forbes underlines, “By stealing property, further impoverishing the least fortunate among its population and undermining social trust, thereby poisoning politics and hurting future investment, India has immorally and unnecessarily harmed its people, while setting a dreadful example for the rest of the world. ”
Titled “What India Has Done To Its Money Is Sickening And Immoral”, published in the Forbes issue dated January 24, 2017, the commentary says, the abrupt scrapping of 85% of currency has led to “economic turmoil” compounded by the fact that “the government didn't print a sufficient amount of the new bills, lest word leak out as to what was about to take place.”
Pointing out that “many workers are leaving the cities to go back to their villages because so many businesses are closing”, the journal says, “Countless companies are having difficulty meeting payroll, as they can't get the cash to do so. The real estate market has tanked.”
Suggesting that it might have international repercussions, Forbes calls note-ban as “the most extreme and destructive example of the anticash fad currently sweeping governments and the economics profession”.
According to Forbes, “Countries are moving to ban high-denomination bills, citing the rationales trotted out by New Delhi. But there's no misunderstanding what this is truly about: attacking your privacy and inflicting more government control over your life. ”
The journal advises India to “fulfill” the “desire to become a global powerhouse” instead of coming up with such disastrous move. What it should do instead is to “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, so that setting up a business can be done with no cost and in only a few minutes; and take a supersize buzz saw to all the rules that make each infrastructure project a 100-year undertaking.”

Comments

TRENDING

Sardar made up his mind on Pakistan in Dec 1946 "before" Mountbatten's Partition Plan

By Hari Desai* One has to be extra cautious while dealing with the history of towering personalities of the Indian freedom struggle, especially that of Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel (October 31, 1875 - December 15, 1950). Present-day politicians prefer to "pronounce” on his life and quote him according to their convenience like a blind person describing an elephant.

Insider plot to kill Deendayal Upadhyay? What RSS pracharak Balraj Madhok said

By Shamsul Islam*  Balraj Madhok's died on May 2, 2016 ending an era of old guards of Hindutva politics. A senior RSS pracharak till his death was paid handsome tributes by the RSS leaders including PM Modi, himself a senior pracharak, for being a "stalwart leader of Jan Sangh. Balraj Madhok ji's ideological commitment was strong and clarity of thought immense. He was selflessly devoted to the nation and society. I had the good fortune of interacting with Balraj Madhok ji on many occasions". The RSS also issued a formal condolence message signed by the Supremo Mohan Bhagwat on behalf of all swayamsevaks, referring to his contribution of commitment to nation and society. He was a leading RSS pracharak on whom his organization relied for initiating prominent Hindutva projects. But today nobody in the RSS-BJP top hierarchy remembers/talks about Madhok as he was an insider chronicler of the immense degeneration which was spreading as an epidemic in the high echelons of th...

If Maoist violence is illegitimate, how is Hindutva, state violence justified? Can right-wing wash off its sins?

By Swami Agnivesh* and Sandeep Pandey** There was major police action against Sudha Bhardwaj, Gautam Navlakha, Varvara Rao, Vernon Gonsalves and Arun Ferreira on 28 August, 2018. Before this police arrested Professor Shoma Sen, Adocate Sudhir Gadling, Sudhir Dhawle, Mahesh Raut and Rona Wilson on 6 June. Even before this Dr. Binayak Sen, Soni Sori, Ajay TG, Professor GN Saibaba and Prashant Rahi have been arrested and all these activists have been accused of having links with Maoists.