India ready to go cashless?
By vigneshwaran
@vignevikki (151)
Madurai, India
December 9, 2016 8:38am CST
Demonetization not just made a gigantic desire to scoop out dark cash and end defilement additionally sowed the seed of what may get the chance to be known as another period - the cashless India development. In the midst of the considerable number of dissents and acclaims, Modi government has certainly cleared route for India to acknowledge the plastic method for installment.
It lies in our grasp on how we take it. It is possible that we take it decidedly and welcome digitalization of cash in each stroll of life and help the penniless with showing them on the best way to convey the errands carefully or hold hands with the protestors on how it is influencing poor people and cry to convey the progressions to a prompt stop.
2 people like this
4 responses
@dragon54u (31634)
• United States
9 Dec 16
I have read about this and it is disturbing. There are many poor people who have some cash put by that they got tax free in order to have a little money for emergencies. These funds will be taken from them or useless. Countries want cashless so that they can control the people. Dictatorship absolute government control is coming quickly.
1 person likes this
@franxav (13849)
• India
9 Dec 16
It's a far cry.Modi has perhaps forgotten that 80% of the Indians still live in villages and many of whom don't have any bank account, many of whom even today don't know how to read and write numbers. No harm in having high ambitions but at the same time why should one not be realistic?
1 person likes this
@manasamanu (3746)
• Bangalore, India
27 May 17
Going cashless is a good idea but think of those innocent illiterate people who doesn't even know to count. Can they cope up with this. They need time and more over education. This is the area first MODI should concentrate on not digitizing India. Once the people of a country or educated it automatically digitizes and he doesn't have to work hard for it.