ENGLISH LANGUAGE - Reading Comprehension from "The Hindu" Editorial
Demonetization of rupee notes:
A method in the shock therapy
Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s move to curb unaccounted cash, or
black money, circulating in the Indian economy by withdrawing the highest-value
currency notes of Rs.500 and Rs.1,000 as legal tender within three-odd hours of
the announcement, is a bold one. He invoked provocative imagery to explain the
measure — of corrupt officials stashing kilos of ill-gained cash under their
mattresses, and such illicit black money fuelling inflation as well as
terrorism. He pointed out how difficult it is for honest taxpayers to buy a
house as the real estate sector seldom operates without a cash component, some
of which finds its way to political funding. The increase in the circulation of
these notes in the past five years has been disproportionate to the economy’s
growth. The introduction of new Rs.500 and Rs.2,000 notes, the government
argues, would not only check counterfeit currency, a problem that has assumed
serious dimensions, but also purge India ’s economy of the black wealth
amassed in the form of high-value notes. Any decision like this needs to be
sudden, and it is not surprising that it has caused hardship as people scramble
to get notes of smaller denomination for daily expenditure. The only defence
for this is that the larger public purpose outweighs the immediate difficulties.
Having promised during the 2014 election campaign to bring back
black money worth lakhs of crores supposedly stashed abroad, the NDA government
has been under pressure to do something dramatic. The two amnesty schemes it launched over the past
year, including one for foreign assets, didn’t yield anything near the 23.2 per
cent of GDP that the World Bank had estimated India ’s shadow economy to be in
2007. Today that would be nearly $479 billion in unaccounted wealth, according
to rating agency Crisil. While there will be pain and confusion in the short
term for common people and the economy, a disruptive measure was perhaps the only way to
shake up the system to a new compliance normal. But the Centre must ensure that
no poor person is saddled with old, useless notes due to the lack of official
identity documents or a bank account, and avoid putting to disadvantage older
citizens unable to visit a bank repeatedly to exchange high-value notes. It
should find ways to check black money parked in benami properties (possibly
through a digital land and realty inventory) and gold. There must also be administrative
and electoral reforms to advance digital payments and eliminate the prospect of
the new currency regime spawning the ghost economy afresh.
1). The reason behind the withdrawing the currency notes of Rs.
500 and Rs. 1000 was
a) To curb unaccounted cash
b) To restrain black money
c) To reprocess the old notes
d) Both (a) and (b)
e) Both (a) and (c)
2). Which of the following is true according to the passage?
a) It is a easy task for honest
taxpayers to buy a house as the real estate sector seldom operates without a
cash component.
b) The increase in the circulation
of these notes in the past five years has been proportionate to the economy’s
growth.
c) Today that would be nearly $479
billion in accounted wealth, according to rating agency Crisil.
d) Centre need not ensure that no
poor person is saddled with old, useless notes due to the lack of official
identity documents or a bank account.
e) None of the above
3). What is the suitable title for the passage?
a) PM’s mission for economic
growth
b) Indian economy – The new era
c) A method in the shock therapy
d) Black money Eradication
e) None of the above
4). What are the ways in which the black money parked under benami
parties?
a) digital land
b) realty inventory
c) gold
d) Both a & b
e) All of the above
5). What is the main objective of the passage?
a) To curb unaccounted cash, or
black money, circulating in the Indian economy
b) No poor people is saddled with
old, useless notes due to the lack of official identity documents or a bank
account, and avoid putting to disadvantage older citizens unable to visit a
bank repeatedly to exchange high-value notes.
c) To find the corrupt officials
stashing kilos of ill-gained cash under their mattresses.
d) None of these.
e) All of the above.
(Q.6-8) : Choose the word which is most nearly the SAME in meaning
as the word printed in bold as used in the passage.
6). AMNESTY
a) Remission
b) Castigation
c) Levying
d) Punishment
e) Retribution
7). REGIME
a) Commotion
b) Unauthorized
c) Reign
d) Choas
e) Bad influence
8). OUTWEIGHS
a) Lose
b) Fail
c) Abate
d) Surrender
e) Surpass
(Q. 9-10) : Choose the word which is most OPPOSITE in meaning of
the word printed in bold as used in the passage.
a) Evacuation
b) Suppression
c) Sluice
d) Corrupt
e) Abolish
10). DISRUPTIVE
a) Unruly
b) Disturbing
c) Settling
d) Turbulent
e) Riotous
SOLUTION
1). D
2). E
3). C
4). D
5). E
6). A
7). C
8). E
9). D
10). C
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