Deccan Chronicle

Currency in circulatio­n has doubled: RBI data

Circulatio­n had dipped to `8.9L-cr following note ban

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Currency with the public has reached a record high level of over `18.5 lakh crore, more than double from a low of about `7.8 lakh crore it had hit post-demonetisa­tion decision in late 2016, as per RBI data.

At the same time, the total currency put in circulatio­n by the Reserve Bank has also more than doubled to over `19.3 lakh crore — from a low of about `8.9 lakh crore post- demonetisa­tion.

Currency with the public is arrived at after deducting cash with banks from total currency in circulatio­n.

This high level of currency available with the public is in sharp contrast to the reported cash crunch in various parts of the country a few months ago. There has been a fear that hoarding or accumulati­on of large amounts of cash for various reasons could have triggered an artificial currency crunch.

The figures for both ‘currency with the public’ and ‘currency in circulatio­n’ have also exceeded the levels seen before the government’s demonetisa­tion decision on November 8, 2016, that saw nearly 86 per cent of the currency in circulatio­n at that time being invalidate­d overnight by scrapping the then `500/1,000 notes.

The public was given time to deposit the invalidate­d notes in banks, which saw nearly 99 per cent of banned notes coming back into the system.

As per the RBI’s latest disclosure in this regard, people had returned `15.28 lakh crore as on June 30, 2017, of the `15.44 lakh crore banned currency, or 98.96 per cent, of the scrapped notes to the system.

Since then, the RBI has introduced new denominati­ons of `2,000 and `200, among others, besides a new `500 note.

After the recent cash crunch, the government had announced that printing of `500 notes would be stepped up.

While the RBI is yet to announce its final word on processing and verificati­on of all the returned notes, the latest ‘money supply’ data from the central bank puts the “currency with the public” at over `18.5 lakh crore as on May 25, 2018 — up more than 31 per cent from year-ago level.

This is an over two-fold jump from `7.8 lakh crore as on December 9, 2016 — the lowest level it had seen after the announceme­nt of the demonetisa­tion decision as people rushed to deposit the scrapped notes.

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