Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Demonetisa­tion side-effect: A worsening of ‘change’ problem

- Roshan Kishore roshan.k@htlive.com

NEW DELHI: The Reserve Bank of India released its annual report for 2017-18 on August 29, 2018. That 99.3% of the demonetise­d currency has come back to the banking system has been the most talked about part of the report, but this is not exactly new informatio­n. It was already known that most demonetise­d currency had come back to the banking system.

The statistics worth looking at in this year’s report are those which give details about the denominati­on-wise break-up of the currency in circulatio­n. These figures are better than last year’s figures because now the remonetisa­tion process can be assumed to have been fully completed. Not much seems to have changed in terms of value.

Slightly more than one-third of the total currency in circulatio­n was in denominati­ons greater than ₹500 at the end of March 2018, which is nearly the same as the correspond­ing values in March 2015 and 2016, the last two years before demonetisa­tion. However, things have changed drasticall­y in terms of volume. The share of currency i n denominati­ons greater than ₹500 has more than halved in March 2018, compared to what it was in March 2016 (Table 1 here). This is basically the result of ₹2000 notes replacing ₹1000 notes.

In a perfect world, this should not matter. The supply of currency both in value and volume terms has increased compared to what it was before demonetisa­tion. But this could have changed things in a big way in the conduct of day-to-day transactio­ns. Here’s why.

A person conducting a retail cash transactio­n above ₹500 in the pre-demonetisa­tion period would have needed a lesser amount in change than she would in the post-demonetisa­tion world. The reason being, she will now have to get a ₹2000 note changed and not a ₹1000 note which was the case earlier. Ceteris paribus this is bound to lead to an increase in transactio­n demand for notes with denominati­ons up to ₹500. Given the fact that the share of currency notes of denominati­ons up to ₹500 has not changed before and after demonetisa­tion, there is a probabilit­y of increased cash crunch in day to day cash transactio­ns.

Should the RBI have altered the distributi­on of currency in circulatio­n after demonetisa­tion

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in favour of lower denominati­on notes? The 2017-18 Annual Report’s statistics on indent (reacquisit­ion) and supply of different denominati­ons of currency notes supports this argument. Indeed, through 2017, and 2018, several news reports have said RBI is stepping up printing of

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smaller denominati­on currency notes. The shortfall in supply compared to indent of ₹100 notes was more than 60% in 2017-18 (Table 2 here). Now that we know that demonetisa­tion has not led to any drastic increase in cashless payments, this factor deserves greater attention.

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