From Wolfstreet.com:
Another person who has come out strongly in favor of the government’s actions, for very different reasons, is the world’s richest (official) billionaire, Bill Gates, who just happened to be in India on business a few days after the government’s decree.
“The world as a whole will go cashless, but predicting for any country when that will happen is very hard,” he told the Indian prime minister. In Gates’ opinion, India’s latest move should put it at the forefront of the fintech revolution: “All of the pieces are coming together,” he said. “I think in the next several years India will become the most digitized economy, not just by size but by percentage as well.”
Gates has good reason to be excited at such a prospect. After all, both, Microsoft and the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation stand to benefit enormously from a more digitized Indian economy. As the Indian financial daily Business Standard notes, Gates wants to partner with the Indian government on a whole raft of major initiatives, including cyber crime, digital health, digital literacy, e-agriculture and, of course, e-payments.
During his stay in India, Gates had a meeting with the government’s Minister of Information Technology, Law and Justice Ravi Shankar Prasad to discuss those collaborative opportunities. Industry experts say that Microsoft is already providing back-end support to a number of payment banks in India, which are set to launch in the next few months. According to Business Standard, the Ministry has requested the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation to be part of the digitizing process.
“It’s a very exciting time in India and some of these digital platform opportunities are really quite amazing,” Gates gushed after the meeting. “The government has invested manpower and the payments banks and payment infrastructure. It is now a case of building the applications on top of those. We need to work on health issues, health applications. Our Foundation is committed to working on those areas – our relationship with this Ministry will be very critical for us,” Gates said.
That the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation should emerge as an important advocate and beneficiary of India’s demonetization drive should come as little surprise. The foundation has carved out an important role for itself in India since launching operations there in the early 2000s. It is also one of the most vocal proponents of a cashless economy. As Gates himself wrote in the Bill and Melinda Gates’ Foundation’s 2015 annual letter, poor communities in emerging economies — in particular Africa — represent a wonderful untapped potential for e-payments providers (emphasis added):
“(B)ecause there is strong demand for banking among the poor, and because the poor can in fact be a profitable customer base, entrepreneurs in developing countries are doing exciting work – some of which will “trickle up” to developed countries over time.”
In 2012, the BMG Foundation helped launch the Better Than Cash Alliance (BTCA), a UN-hosted partnership of governments, companies and international organizations whose stated mission is to “accelerate the transition from cash to digital payments globally through excellence in advocacy, knowledge and services to members.”
As we’ve pointed out before, in light of the inexorable advance of electronic payment systems, cash’s days may well be numbered. But there is a whole world of difference between a slow natural death and euthanasia. It is now clear that an extremely powerful, albeit loose, alliance of governments, banks, central banks, start-ups, large corporations, and NGOs are determined to pull the plug on cash — and their vehicle of choice is the BTCA.
The BTCA’s membership list reads like a Who’s Who of some of the world’s most influential corporations and institutions. They include Coca Coca, Visa and Mastercard, the Citi Foundation, the US Agency for International Development (USAID), the World Saving Banks Institute, which represents 7,000 retail and savings banks worldwide, the Ford Foundation, the Clinton Development Initiative, and a bewildering alphabet soup of UN organizations.
But as we warned in October, it’s BTCA’s member governments that matter the most, for it is they who will ultimately be shaping or even bending the laws and traditional practices of their respective lands to “accelerate the transition from cash to digital payments.”
BTCA currently has 18 member governments among its ranks, all of them representing emerging and developing economies, the most important testing grounds for cashless economics. They include India, which joined the organization on September 1, 2015, exactly a year after the launch of Modi’s flagship financial inclusion program Pradhan Mantri Jan-Dhan Yojana, which saw 175 million new bank accounts created. In BTCA’s own words, its new partnership with India is an “extension of the Indian Government’s commitment to reduce cash in its economy.”
It’s a commitment that the government has now more than honored. And amidst all the chaos and impoverishment that its actions have unleashed, Bill Gates hopes to reap the benefits. By Don Quijones, Raging Bull-Shit.
This is how “Economic Shock & Awe” turned into “Nightmare without End.” Read… India Launches War on Corruption, Hits Cash, Chaos Ensues
hmmm. thank you for uncovering this lila. bmb is behind the vaccination programs as we all know. and they are behind constructing the technetronic society which is a global police state the worst forms of which have been captured in many dystopic novels and hollywood movies. I still come back to food and malthus. all these are enablers to implement food controlled genocide, alongside curtailment of reproduction capabilities of “useless eaters”. digital monies can be turned off at the flick of a switch to control life, mobility, and services.
what we are perhaps seeing are babysteps in that direction. and it really looks more and more like india has been chosen as the experiment.
why india for this social experiement?
thanks
zahir
Lots of poor, uneducated people who can be bamboozled. Culture that is easily demonized to insular people in the West. People who are already always portrayed as starving and diseased, so a little more starvation and disease isn’t going to elicit a huge popular reaction. People who “stole our jobs” so turn around is fair play. People who are pagan idolators, possibly devil worshipers, benighted, racially-mixed and inferior, dark-skinned, deserve to be ruled by their betters…etc…plus lots of social justice warriors, feminists, vocal intelligentsia eager to be seen as progressive in the eyes of the West….languages that most people don’t read and so cannot understand…strategic position…intellectual capital that can be stolen…and of course revising history and wiping out certain historical truths…
by that standard Lila don’t the countries in Africa fit the bill first?
is there a relation to China-Russia-India forming the largest contiguous landmass with much of the world’s resources underneath its feet? Control of central asia using India as the pivot? I can’t claim I have sorted it all out why India…. The domestic lens you apply ought to be augmented by the geopolitical lens which, as we have seen time and again, often is the higher order bit…
what is the geopolitical angle you think for choosing india for this social experiment?
is it somehow related to CPEC — the new silk route being constructed by China?
why do this to India, as Steve Forbes, whom you quote in your most recent citation, said: “What India has done to its money is sickening and immoral.”
thanks
zahir
Oh yes…I did say strategic, didn’t I?
India has always been a gateway, hence its repeated conquest by ambitious kings.
Seas around the subcontinent are essential to ruling the land mass of Eurasia…which is the heart of world domination, being home to the greatest concentration of population, among other things.
China, as I’ve blogged before, is the entity the NWO is working with ultimately.
Hence Jade Helm….