GST crashes even money lenders' usurious rates
Rates have dipped to a third to 6 per cent from 9-18 per cent about 6-9 months ago.

Borrowing in the informal market is no more lucrative.
Lenders who fund small traders and merchants have lowered their rates to just a third of what they were charging, but still the demand is not showing up.
Rates have dipped to a third to 6 per cent from 9-18 per cent about 6-9 months ago, said two dealers aware of the market dynamics.
"Those businessmen have now limited options to run operations in cash especially after GST implementation and demonetisation," said a textile business owner, who did not want to be identified.
"From a local politician to an industrialist or local trader whoever has additional unaccounted cash are normally the lenders in this informal loan market."
With the implementation of GST which produces a chain of transactions till it reaches the ultimate consumer, merchants have little scope to escape accounting for their trades.
So, instead of funding their purchases through informal credit at high rates which was beneficial since it allowed escaping the tax net, they are choosing to fund businesses through formal credit. To keep businesses running, money lenders have lowered rates.
Since the tax department is keeping close watch on businesses, all traders ETspoke to preferred anonymity. This market is known as a plat for m for lending and borrowing unaccounted or untaxed money without any collateral. Traders now shy away from availing such cred it amid cash squeeze triggered by reform measures like GST and demonetisation.Sometimes, people take highly leveraged positions borrowing such money, which a bank would have declined.
Mumbai's Bhiwandi, a business centre, used to be the hotbed of it. It has died down after the Central Value Added Tax, a central government tax levy introduced by Vajpayeeled NDA, was introduced.
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