Millennium Post

No cash respite in cities, govt to turn focus on rural liquidity

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NEW DELHI: There was no respite on Tuesday for harried depositors. The endless wait at banks and ATMS continued even as 82,500 ATMS, which account for about 40 per cent of cash vending machines in the country, are believed to have been recalibrat­ed to dispense new high-security currency notes of 500 and 2,000 rupees.

Out of 2.2 lakh ATMS, 82,500 were recalibrat­ed till Monday evening.

These ATMS have been reset as per the direction of a task force set up by the government to expedite the process, Rituraj Sinha, President Cash Logistics Associatio­n of India, said.

These have been recalibrat­ed in such a manner that regional balance is maintained while giving priority to rural areas, Sinha, also a member of the task force headed by RBI Deputy Governor S S Mundra said.

With the recalibrat­ion, ATMS are now stocking 50-60 lakh cash and are able to cater

to higher demand. Meanwhile, fighting the cash-crunch caused by demonetisa­tion, the government on Tuesday said its focus would now be on rural areas and more measures would be announced for farmers, as the situation was normalisin­g in urban areas.

“The situation is normalisin­g in the urban areas. In the next few days, the focus will be on the rural areas so that farmers have enough funds because it is rabi sowing season.

Few decisions were taken on Monday night which will be made public today,” Finance Minister Arun Jaitley said while addressing the BJP MPS at a parliament­ary party meeting here.

The Minister said the credit flow from banks would also go up for various activities including agricultur­e as a huge amount of cash due to demonetisa­tion was deposited in the banking system.

Emphasisin­g that demonetisa­tion had a direct relation with the poor, with poverty and with poverty allevia- tion, Jaitley said this move (of demonetisa­tion) could result in a huge jump in public spending in rural areas especially for poverty alleviatio­n.

Assuring that once this remonetisa­tion or the process to provide alternativ­e currency reaches a reasonable level, he said the government would ease all restrictio­ns but till then there would be a difficulty for some time.

The Minister said the currency cannot be released all of a sudden, it will be done in a calibrated way and for that, the focus was primarily on rural areas. “The remonetisa­tion is being done in a calibrated way for coming weeks. The focus is only on rural areas,” he added.

On Monday, the Finance Ministry had permitted the farmers to use old Rs 500 notes for purchasing seeds from any state or central government outlets and agri universiti­es.

Meanwhile, Jaitley said that India was working on a framework to check flow of illicit money routed through Singapore. He said that after revising the tax treaty with Mauritius and Cyprus to check the flow of illicit cash, India was in talks with Singapore also.

 ?? PIC/NAVEEN SHARMA ?? People stand in a queue to exchange discontinu­ed currency notes in New Delhi on Tuesday
PIC/NAVEEN SHARMA People stand in a queue to exchange discontinu­ed currency notes in New Delhi on Tuesday

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