Hindustan Times (Delhi)

99.3% demonetise­d notes were returned, says RBI

- HT Correspond­ent letters@hindustant­imes.com CONTINUED ON P 6

NEW DELHI: The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) has conceded for the first time that almost all the banknotes invalidate­d in November 2016 have returned to it in the form of deposits, handing the Opposition fresh ammunition to target the government ahead of a string of state polls leading to the 2019 Lok Sabha elections.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi rendered invalid ₹500 and Rs1,000 notes worth ₹15.44 lakh crore by value from the midnight of November 8-9, 2016, in an unpreceden­ted move the Bharatiya Janata Party (Bjp)-led government described as a crackdown on black money, or untaxed, unaccounte­d cash stashed away by dishonest individual­s, terror financing and counterfei­t currency.

In its latest annual report released on Wednesday, RBI said as much as 99.3% of the junked banknotes by value, or ₹15.3 lakh crore, had returned to the bank- ing system, confirming what had been widely perceived by economists and banking experts a long time ago: that much of the money had found its way back or that some individual­s had found ways of laundering their black money.

Senior Congress leader and former finance minister P Chi- dambaram fired the first shot in a new political slugfest triggered by the long-pending report, released after a painstakin­g audit of the banknotes that were returned by citizens who had been given until the end of 2016 to deposit old high-value notes in their possession.

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