In the backseat of a black-and-yellow taxi in New Delhi Railway Station, a driver is lying down with his arms folded behind his head. You can바카라t see his face in the darkness, but he is a man much in demand today. He has already saved the day for several travellers left stranded without tenderable cash. 바카라I바카라ll give you Rs 400 for your Rs 500, and Rs 700 for Rs 1,000. At Chandni Chowk, Rs 1,000 is going for Rs 600,바카라 he says. 바카라A lot of passengers have no other option.바카라
Gauging the reactions to demonetisation in Sadar Bazaar and Ajmeri Gate area, Old Delhi바카라s hub of small traders, reveals a clear class divide. Despite the gloom due to lack of business, a big section of the shop-Âowners and traders바카라said to be the BJP바카라s traditional vote-bank and trading in hardware, construction material, house-fittings, wedding stationery and kitchen utensils바카라seemed to be largely supportive of the government바카라s move, unlike the rickshaw pullers, daily wage workers, migrants and customers in urgent need of cash.
Many shop-owners said they hadn바카라t made any sales even by the end of WedÂnesday evening. Taking the long view, Navin Gupta, who runs a shop dealing in pneumatic Âfittings since 1969, says, 바카라Despite the current inconvenience, I believe this will improve the black money situation and, as the prime minister said, help curb terrorism as well.바카라 Indeed, the claim that demonetisation will strengÂthen the fight against terrorism바카라and the way PM Narendra Modi called upon the people to join the fight by bearing with a few days of inconvenience바카라appears to have enthused the people more than the idea of weeding out black money. It made the crisis seem a lot more personal. 바카라We are stakeholders in the country바카라s security and this is perhaps the first time we have realised it pays to be honest and there is, in fact, is a premium on it.바카라
The father-son duo of Pradeep and Tarun Jain, sitting with their backs against the wall in a shop packed with brass rods, feel the same way. 바카라I think Pakistan must have been printing more Indian currency than their own,바카라 jokes Tarun. 바카라DemÂonetisation here will put a lot of priÂnting presses out of business there.바카라
But what does Bhagat Ram care for black money, terrorism and Pakistani printing presses? A Modi supporter in the last election, for the past 25 years he has been making ends meet by manually dragging heavy material from wholesalers바카라 godowns to shops or to customers. He has Rs 270 left in his wallet from Tuesday and could earn nothing the next day. 바카라Look, we바카라re just sitting around today. This measure may work for the rich, not for us. Unlike them, we have no options when we get no work.바카라


Leave no Quarter
In 2011, the UPA government Âannounced that coins of 25 paise and less would be withdrawn from circulation from June 30 that year
No one is denying that black money needs to be curbed, but there are many who would agree with Shambu Nath Singh, who works at an Old Delhi store and believe the measure is 바카라disproportionate in terms of how much black money actually exists and the negative impact it will have on people바카라s lives바카라. And there are also those, who, on being asked whether the poor are disproportionately affected, would agree with Pradeep, who says, 바카라There is no such thing as poor people in this country. You think the vegetable seller outside my shop is poor? Well, he바카라s selling green peas at Rs 120 per kg and doesn바카라t even pay tax. It바카라s difficult for the labourer, but it바카라s hard for us too. People don바카라t pay attention to our problems, becÂause we wear shirts and have moustaches.바카라 Even as he is saying this, a stranger walks in from the street and takes out from his kurta-pocket a wad of Rs 100 notes, tied with rubber bands and packed in plastic. He offers it to them. They refuse. 바카라We need Rs 100 notes, but why should I take this stranger바카라s money?바카라 says Pradeep. 바카라We prefer to take money only through NEFT or RTGS payments.바카라
Singh says, 바카라Black money has many routes, many sources and is stored in diamonds, property and offshore accÂounts. They aren바카라t being tackled here. Instead, if I바카라m a sadhu and you바카라re a chor, the government is making me suffer.바카라 Chandra Prakash, the store바카라s proprietor, quips, 바카라No doubt the motive is good, but it should have been designed to not hit us like this. The government can become hero or zero by this move.바카라
Meanwhile, on the day the banks opened for the first time to the public for depositing demonetised notes in exchange for new notes, the income tax department carried out raids in Delhi, Mumbai and a few other places, cracking down on people making high-value deposits. The raids were also aimed at those who were reportedly selling the demonetised currency notes at a discount and gold at a premium (reportedly Rs 45,000-50,000 per 10 grams).
Cut to the heart of Bangalore바카라s business district. On a good day, Shiva can sell Rs 3,000 worth of tender coconuts on the street. But, on Wednesday, when Rs 500 and Rs 1,000 currency notes were rendered worthless, he could barely manage half that. He had to turn away many who came asking if he would change a Rs 500 note (one even offered him Rs 50 for the exchange).
바카라Whatever profit I earn in a day is soon spent on household and personal expÂenses,바카라 he says. Just the other day, he had spent a small amount on his daughter바카라s fancy dress event in school. So, even though he has a bank account, not much actually ends up in it as savings. He is hoping his sales will get back on track in a couple of days.
Small businesses or individuals who transact only in cash have perhaps faced the immediate impact of the liquidity crunch following the demonetisation of high-value currency notes, although it바카라s likely to be a temporary one. But will the cash-only method of transaction that we have been used to actually fade away and usher in the era of digital payments?
바카라The small trader will adjust to the new way of life,바카라 says Abey Zachariah, CEO of GoodBox, a Bangalore-based startup that hosts an app platform for small businesses to connect and transact with their customers. It currently has 5,200 merchants such as groceries, restaurants, laundries and local cable networks on its platform.
바카라One reason why small vendors wouldn바카라t sign up for digital was because everything needs to go to the bank account. We are now assuming a lot of unaccounted cash will vanish. So, we expect that to change totally and there will be more and more digital payments,바카라 says Zachariah, who reckons things could move in that direction in the next one or two years. 바카라It바카라s a chain reaction. From any angle, it all points towards formal money taking over and informal money coming down significantly.바카라
Just four per cent of retail payments are being done digitally, and the rest through cash and cheques, according to the Confederation of All India Traders, which launched a nationwide campaign to promote digital payments among traders. A May 2016 study by Google and A.T. Kearney predicted that 55 per cent of online sales volumes will be driven by cashless transactions by 2020 from about 40 per cent today.
However, some say it is unlikely that the cash-on-delivery models would become extÂinct anytime soon, considering there is a huge rural population that still transacts only in cash.바카라Cash-on-delivery is going to stay,바카라 says Sridhar Gundaiah, founder of StoreKing, a start-up that offers an assÂisted e-commerce platform where customers in rural areas or small towns place orders through its kiosk placed at kirana stores in their vicinity and pick up the goods from the same store. Besides, he points out, a big section of the people preferring cash-on-delivery for e-commerce purchases are in urban India. 바카라People will always carry cash for the convenience, it바카라s a mindset. There is a big difference between convenience and irregularities,바카라 he says.
By Anoo Bhuyan in Delhi and Ajay Sukumaran in Bangalore