Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

RBI wants to circulate new ₹200 notes through banks, not ATMs

- Mahua Venkatesh Mahua.Venkatesh@htlive.com

PRECAUTION The move is aimed at avoiding another chaotic ATM recalibrat­ion process

The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) is likely to decide against circulatin­g proposed new ₹200 banknotes through ATMs to avoid another chaotic recalibrat­ion process similar to the one that followed the recall of highvalue currency last November.

The central bank wants to circulate the new notes only through bank branches, similar to the way ₹50 and ₹10 notes are circulated.

The RBI board in March cleared a proposal to introduce ₹200 notes to plug the paucity of lower denominati­ons. The mints are likely to start printing the new notes from June.

A senior banking official – who refused to be quoted because he isn’t authorised to talk to media – said dispensing new currency notes through ATMs would mean recalibrat­ing India’s 2,20,000 machines, an exercise that will take more than a month.

These ATMs were just reprogramm­ed to dispense the new ₹2,000 notes.

“The idea is not to disturb the system once again. There has been disruption for more than four weeks between November and December and it is advisable to circulate these notes through the bank branches, though at present these are just proposals,” the official told Hindustan Times.

The proposal to introduce ₹200 notes is part of a larger focus by the government and RBI on circulatin­g lower denominati­on currency notes of ₹100 and ₹500. “People are still reluctant to take ₹2,000 and therefore there is still a shortage of currency notes and the need is to have lower denominati­on notes,” said the official. The problem was aggravated because the government and RBI couldn’t circulate ₹1,000 notes.

In a late-night address on November 8, Prime Minister Narendra Modi withdrew ₹500 and ₹1,000 notes, sucking out roughly 86% of the cash in circulatio­n. The government’s exercise to replenish the cash in the system is expected to be completed by the middle of April after months of cash crunch, a State Bank of India report said.

A sum of ₹15.44 lakh crore was sucked out of the system by demonetisa­tion. Before the exercise, ₹8.58 lakh crore comprised ₹500 notes and ₹6.86 lakh crore in ₹1,000.

Tibetan spiritual leader the Dalai Lama on Friday reached Arunachal Pradesh’s Tawang, which China claims as its own and wants desperatel­y enough to offer a swap for

Aksai Chin.

The exiled leader reached Tawang after a seven-hour road journey from Dirang in Arunachal. He was to have reached Tawang by chopper from Guwahati on April 4, but bad weather forced him to take the 550 km road from Guwahati.

The Dalai Lama’s first stop was Bomdila in Arunachal Pradesh’s West Kameng district, from where the Chinese soldiers had retreated after the 1962 war. After a day of delivering sermon in Bomdila, he spent two days at Dirang, about 40km north, where he consecrate­d the Thupsing Dhargye monastery.

“His Holiness left Dirang in the morning (Friday),” said an officer of the West Kameng district administra­tion.

State police and paramilita­ry personnel kept a vigil along the 140-km stretch between Dirang and Tawang, particular­ly at Sela (13,700 feet) en route.

A 30-km stretch at Sela is partly snow-covered, wet because of melting snow, muddy and slippery.

A series of religious discourses by the Dalai Lama will begin on Saturday and he will stay at the Tawang monastery for four nights before leaving on April 11.

Security has been strengthen­ed around the monastery, the Yid-Ga-Choezin ground where the spiritual leader will deliver his sermon.

 ?? HT FILE ?? Recalibrat­ing India’s more than two lakh ATM machines will take more than a month.
HT FILE Recalibrat­ing India’s more than two lakh ATM machines will take more than a month.

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