All may not be hunky-dory yet but the Covid year may have had a few positives
The second waves of such pandemics in history have on many occasions proven as more lethal compared to the first ones.

Here's an attempt at recapping the key happenings in the last 12 months:
Covid-19 and its mammoth impact on lives will no wonder be the first line. Its associated impacts on livelihoods and jobs follow as a close second.
And the following comes out without too much debate on the financial impact of the pandemic:
- Huge loss in GDP globally, and India
- Loss in international trade
- A stretched financial situation within the economy; corporates and Individuals alike
- A large accumulation of debt
- Accentuating fiscal strain
Thus, all may not be hunky-dory yet.
To all above, we may add the potentially mundane stuff. The huge shift in our daily routines, reduced physical activity, no physical schooling for children, reduced social interaction and travel, have been the causes for anxiety and trauma for many.
Each one of us may add our own few pain points to it and hopefully, there will be an end to the sob story. What doesn’t get captured above is what has changed for the positive through this episode.
Going back in history, the Black Death pandemic in Europe that lasted for over five years in the 14th century and took between 75 million and 200 million lives may have been the cause for the onset of Industrial Revolution in the western countries of Britain, the Netherlands and Belgium.
Now, back to our own time, FY21 has unexpectedly placed each one of us in the innovation zone: from kids to adults, and from gardeners to CEOs.
The year saw a lot of talk on bitcoin and how its value has rallied. But what has not been observed as much are the tremendous efforts the central banks are making to float digital currencies of their own. While China is leagues ahead, European countries are working on a central bank digital currency (CBDC), and the RBI is also drawing the map on that front.
It will not be of surprise if much before we exit the decade, the central bank liquidity statement will have a line item on digital currency in circulation, and it could be at the cost of currency in circulation (hard cash)!
While demonetisation saw a number of small value payments moving from cash to digital modes, the Covid-19 pandemic has reinforced it, thus potentially casting the net wider on the financial inclusion front.
To the above, we can add the significant number of progressive measures announced by the government and the RBI as part of their planned developmental efforts: 24/7 NEFT and RTGS transactions, the Netting Bill, and the countless number of measures taken to deepen our financial markets to name a few.
The pandemic, and its challenges, are not yet over but neither are the opportunities it presents.
(Lakshmanan V, Senior Vice President, Federal Bank. Views are his own)
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