99.3% demonetised notes were returned, says RBI
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.