vaidyanathan krishnamurthy <vaithy_13@yahoo.co.in>
World view on Demonetisation
World view on Demonetisation
*MIND BLOWING RESPONSE FROM INTERNATIONAL MEDIA TO DEMONETIZATION! IT WILL SHUT THE MOUTH OF OPPOSITION!*
This
is how international media responded to india’s currency ban which
shows the impact of this historic decision over world economy and how it
is going to stop corruption and black money in india! IMF, European
Union, World Bank and every reputed international organisations
supported this move, World bank president even said, I am a big fan of
Modi!
Forbes:
Five days after the decision, Forbes has published an article titled
“India’s Great Bank Note Switch Appears To Be Working – $30 Billion In
Rs Deposited In Banks.” The article notes that a move of this magnitude
would result in “obvious chaos”, but points that “so far at least it
looks as if it is working.” The article goes on to call the scheme
“rather well done, a clever plan.”
New
York Times: A New York Times quoted an expert saying it was a wise
move. “The plan, top secret until Mr. Modi’s announcement, was hailed by
financial analysts as bold and potentially transformational for India.
It is also a high-stakes experiment,” the article said.
Washington
Post: It called PM Narendra Modi’s initiative as ‘ambitious’ and in
keeping with his election time vow to initiate a crackdown against black
money. The Post said black money in India ‘is estimated to total from
$400 billion to more than $1 trillion’.
The
Independent: This Singapore-based paper published a glowing article on
the move titled “Modi does a Lee Kuan Yew to stamp out corruption in
India.” Lee Kuan Yew was the Singaporean Prime Minister for several
decades and is considered the architect of modern Singapore. “Government
leaders feel that the sudden move by the Indian Prime Minister has
brought new respect for him.
Bloomberg:
In an article published in leading American financial journal
Bloomberg, Swiss global financial services company UBS Group AG said
that Australia should follow India’s lead and scrap its biggest bank
notes.
“Removing
large denomination notes in Australia would be good for the economy and
good for the banks,” UBS analysts led by Jonathan Mott said in a note
to clients on Monday. Benefits would include reduced crime and welfare
fraud, increased tax revenue and a “spike” in bank deposits
.
A
senior Indian government official even equated Mr Modi to Singapore’s
first Prime Minister Lee Kuan Yew. From making up his mind to rolling it
out on 8 Nov, a new Lee Kuan Yew is born in India. It will be reflected
in the legacy of this Prime Minister,”.
RB Kishore
VP,AIRIEF,
ED(Retd),LIC
Life Member,Probus Club
044-2815 5810 & 098 4034 0591
.
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