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India targets gold hoards and temple treasures in trade deficit battle

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India targets gold hoards and temple treasures in trade deficit battle
BYRAJA MURTHYonDECEMBER 15, 2015inASIA TIMES NEWS & FEATURES,INDIA

India aims to recycle 20,000 tons of privately-owned gold in a monetization scheme to reduce record bullion imports and trade deficit. India overtook China this year as the world’s biggest consumer of gold.


The vaults of Padmanabha Swamy temple in southern India have a treasure trove of jewels and precious metals

The Indian government woos a staggering US$ 778 billion of gold with individuals, ancient temples and trusts, to tackle the current account deficit (CAD) – the gap between export and import revenues.

Imported gold contributed 28% of CAD for financial year ending March 2013. India’s expected deficit of $20.6 billion for 2015-16 favorably compares with $28 billion (1.4 % of GDP) in 2014-2015. But with fluctuating global prices, the Modi government intends to more significantly cut trade deficit, and rein in inflation.

If all goes merry and bright with the new Gold Monetization Scheme, deposited gold will be stored as ingots, then minted as gold coins, sold to earn foreign exchange, and loaned to jewelry merchants as in Mumbai’s Zaveri Bazaar.

Zaveri Bazaar’s Sheikh Memon Street in the dusk of a December evening seemed like other crowded lanes in the Crawford Market shopping area, except its shops own a few hundred millions dollars of gold.

Lalit Jain and Ashish Mehta do business near one such jeweler declaring intention to ‘buy old gold, diamonds, silver and pearls’. From the ground floor of the Bank of India Bullion Exchange Branch building, Jain’s Mahavir Hallmarking Centre has its striking white décor cleanly appropriate to its role in this gilded road: certifying purity of gold.

Mahavir Hallmarking made history this November serving the first three customers in India who signed up for the gold monetization scheme. These Gold Savings Account holders earn a tax-free interest, while the melted gold gets recycled back to the jewelry industry. Depositors can choose between getting back their gold quantity or its cash value at the end of fixed deposit terms.

“The GMS (Gold Monetization Scheme) is a good idea and can reduce the current account deficit”, Lalit Jain told Asia Times, with insider view as vice president of the Indian Association of Hallmarking Centres. “But banks have to play key role in spreading awareness, and the scheme needs to address some issues.”

One such issue is over 95% of gold in India being bought with cash, says Jain. Gold depositors then might have the taxman showing keen interest in source of that gold – something bashful black money holders would rather avoid.

The Indian government may mull over a mild tax amnesty to gold depositors. Or, more radically, ban all cash purchases in gold. That could interestingly impact India’s ravenous appetite for the noble metal. Gold imports hit a record high of 1,000 tons worth US$36 billion in 2015.

India’s official gold reserves are 557.7 tons in December 2015, according to latest World Gold Council statistics, compared with the 20,000 tons of privately owned gold.

20,000 tons is a stupendous quantity, considering that less than 175,000 tons of gold have been mined since the start of civilization – with over 90% of it after January 24, 1848, when a New Jersey sawmill operator James Marshall struck something valuable at Coloma, on the South Fork American River, and started the California Gold Rush.

The world’s oceans are said to contain 15,000 tons of gold; the entire US official gold holdings are 8,133 tons, with 4,600 tons of it in Fort Knox. Over 20,000 tons of India’s sleeping gold can change the dynamics of the world’s bullion market.

“Of India’s 20,000 to 22,000 tons of gold in private ownership, temples may have about 1,000 tons,” Lalit Jain and Ashish Mehta said. Vast quantities of gold are in small holdings across the country.

Well-known ancient temples cumulatively receive hundreds of tons gold that devotees donate every year. It is a tradition of renunciation stretching across millennia.

The 1700-year old Tirupati Balaji Temple in southern India has an estimated 200 tons of gold. The temple trustees have committed 1.5 tons of it for the Gold Monetization Scheme.

“Our gold is intact as periodical interest accrues in metal rather than in cash, and we still hold (own) the gold,” a temple official told theEconomic Times.

The temple uses donations of gold and cash for public services like education. The gods have no practical use for gold from humans, but they need such shared merits earned from serving fellow beings.

Mumbai’s 200-year old Siddhivinayak temple plans to deposit 40 kg of its 160 kg of gold under the new Gold Monetization Scheme, and use the INR 6.9 million (US$ 102,697) in annual interest to fund medical aid for economically weaker people.

On December 13, Shirdi town’s Saibaba Temple committed 200 kg of its 380 kg gold holdings to the GMS. The annual interest of about US$ 500,000 will fund two free hospitals that the temple trust runs to serve 35,000 people a year.

More gold treasures may be awaiting discovery. In 2011, a US $22 billion trove of gold, diamonds, precious stones and artifacts was found in the 9th century Padmanabha Swamy temple in Thiruvananthapuram in south India. This, the world’s single-largest treasure trove, was in five vaults opened after 130 years. The government wants such gold idling for centuries back in the economy.

India’s other plans include a gold exchange such as in China and Turkey, the world’s other great guzzlers of gold with monetization schemes.

Turkey’s successful gold recycling pulled in 240 tons worth US$ 10.4 billion in 2013, said a World Gold Council report. At the Grand Bazaar in Istanbul, the jewelry shops beyond the Light of Ottomans Gate feed a Turkish lust for gold similar to India. Turkey allows withdrawing 1-1.5g of 24ct hallmarked gold through Kuveyt Türk Bank’s 500 gold ATMs.

Over seven million Chinese and overseas traders, 8,000 corporate clients have traded through the Shanghai Gold Exchange since it opened in October 30, 2002.

Gold exchanges ensure more transparency and fair prices, but India’s immediate exchange plan is for people and trustees exchanging their stored gold for interest from term deposits, and to recycle the gold.

By committing nearly two tons of gold this December, three of India’s well-known temples have gifted a $62 million starting boost to the scheme that enables keeping the gold cake while enjoying the interest – and giving the economy a healing trade deficit cut.

Notes:

Gold Monetization Scheme, Ministry of Finance, more details of the Gold Savings Account

Raja Murthy is a Mumbai-based journalist writing for the Statesman since 1990 and Asia Times since 2003 – besides having been a long-term contributor to the Times of India, Economic Times, Elle etc. He shuttles between Mumbai and the Himalayas, for more intensive practice of Vipassana and Metta Bhavana.

(Copyright 2015 Asia Times Holdings Limited, a duly registered Hong Kong company. All rights reserved. Please contact us about sales, syndication and republishing.)


India targets gold hoards and temple treasures in trade deficit battle – Asia Times
 
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yea yea.. ask the secular A$$ ***** for gold, not RSS backed hindu temples.. you know Hindu gold might do harm to the Secular country..


You gone nuts which temple is run by RSS none not a single one VHP/RSS only have Bharat Mata temple.

Getting gold from temple is good idea. It's bloody criminal waste of money to feed such temples the gold these temples had is just insane if even 20-25% of it can been kept in bank it will do wonders to economy.
 
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Hard Bullion should not leave the country in large amounts.Artificial money is based on speculation,but physical money is permanent.Thus we should gradually increase our gold reserves.Buy excess gold from the private collectors and temples as necessary.
 
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and what did this deity will do with tons & tons of unused gold

Same thing it was doing for centuries ...I dont understand why secular State want Hindu temple's gold? They wont touch Waqf properties for development ,They wont touch Churches (whose annual funds is equal to our navy's annual budget) ,or any other religions properties
 
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and what did this deity will do with tons & tons of unused gold
WTF is your problem..? It is not anybody's gold right?? It was donated by devotees during various period in devotion to God.. It was their gold, and not government's .. governments keep changing but belief remains the same.. I would really like to see any govt dare think about touching temple's gold.. Then that will be the real day, when this world realises what real Hindutva is..
The so called seculars and govt appeasers should first give the golds stacked up in their houses and the golds decorated in their family women's body to support this gold deficit.. After giving all that up let them think about touching the treasures of the temples..

You gone nuts which temple is run by RSS none not a single one VHP/RSS only have Bharat Mata temple.

Getting gold from temple is good idea. It's bloody criminal waste of money to feed such temples the gold these temples had is just insane if even 20-25% of it can been kept in bank it will do wonders to economy.
Don't you worry about the temple's gold, it is not your family property to take it and just donate.. it is the belief of hindu's to donate gold to the gods and I challenge literally if anyone got guts to say it openly in a public forum in India..
Indian Economy didn't go down because of Gods, it went down because of the fuckin politicians and their finance policies and it is upto them to bring it back to normalcy..
And by the way, who the hell is feeding temples man?? are you nuts? Temples feed governments dumbo and not the other way around..
 
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it
WTF is your problem..? It is not anybody's gold right?? It was donated by devotees during various period in devotion to God.. It was their gold, and not government's .. governments keep changing but belief remains the same.. I would really like to see any govt dare think about touching temple's gold.. Then that will be the real day, when this world realises what real Hindutva is..
The so called seculars and govt appeasers should first give the golds stacked up in their houses and the golds decorated in their family women's body to support this gold deficit.. After giving all that up let them think about touching the treasures of the temples..


Don't you worry about the temple's gold, it is not your family property to take it and just donate.. it is the belief of hindu's to donate gold to the gods and I challenge literally if anyone got guts to say it openly in a public forum in India..
Indian Economy didn't go down because of Gods, it went down because of the fuckin politicians and their finance policies and it is upto them to bring it back to normalcy..
And by the way, who the hell is feeding temples man?? are you nuts? Temples feed governments dumbo and not the other way around..
It is and it will be the temple gold what govt is going to do is deposit in the bank for fixed term and give interest on the same so the so what the problem
 
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it

It is and it will be the temple gold what govt is going to do is deposit in the bank for fixed term and give interest on the same so the so what the problem
Exactly my point.. We all know what Indian govt and politicians are capable of and touching temple gold for any noble purpose will not be allowed.. So thanks but no thanks.. find some other resources for boosting the country's economy..
 
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