The Free Press Journal

Bankers say note ban has been good for them

- AGENCIES

A couple of days ahead of the first anniversar­y of demonetisa­tion, bankers said on Monday that the move was good for them as it resulted in higher deposits and pushed digitisati­on at a faster pace. On November 8 last year, the Modi government demonetise­d Rs 500 and Rs 1,000 notes as part of its drive against black money, counterfei­t notes and corruption. "For the banking sector, I would consider

it positive as lots of money has come into the formal banking system. Casa (current account, savings account) deposits have gone up by minimum 250-300 basis points which itself is a big positive," SBI chairman Rajnish Kumar said.

Deposits, which came into

the banking sector left banks with trillions of rupees in surplus funds, leading to an overall decline in money market rates. ICICI Bank chief executive Chanda Kochhar said the note ban led to formalisat­ion of financial savings and increased the flow of funds to mutual funds and insurance. "Post-demonetisa­tion, there was a faster shift towards digitisati­on. Going forward, the whole approach towards digitisati­on will continue," Kochhar said.

Although some analysts and a section of people in the government had initially claimed that the move would lead to a windfall gain of at least 20 per cent of the Rs 15.87 trillion (Rs 15.87 lakh crore) of banknotes cancelled, the Reserve Bank in June said as much as 99.1 per cent of the junked bills had returned to the banking system. This led to widespread criticism of the move and the opposition parties are organising protests on the first anniversar­y of the demonetisa­tion drive as "black day".

Formalisat­ion of financial savings will increase the ability of banks and other players to reach out to small customers, Kochhar said. Kumar said that postnote ban and the roll out of the Goods and Services Tax (GST), some sectors have seen improvemen­t.

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