Gulf News

Cash crunch pushes India to defend banks

Reasons for liquidity squeeze range from farm spending to looming elections and cash hoarding

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India’s cash machines are running dry, leaving policymake­rs and bankers scrambling to assuage the public and prevent perception about the nation’s fraud-hit financial system from worsening.

As the banknote shortage spread across several states, the government finally addressed the issue in a statement last Tuesday, where it cited an “unusual spurt in demand” for cash.

The Finance Ministry rolled out top officials to assure Indians — still stuck with memories about Prime Minister’s Narendra Modi’s shock demonetisa­tion in 2016 — that while there’s ample amounts of currency available, steps are also being taken to print more and the broader banking system is healthy.

“Our first order of response is to make sure that adequate cash is available at ATMs and in banks so that whatever demand, for whatever reason it is there, is met,” Sanjeev Sanyal, Modi’s principal economic adviser and a former Deutsche Bank global strategist, told BloombergQ­uint.

“There is no crisis, the banks are in perfectly good shape, we have more than adequate cash and more will be printed if necessary. So there is absolutely no need for anybody to panic about this.”

Demonetisa­tion to blame

Reasons for the squeeze range from farm spending to looming elections, but its roots lie in Modi’s 2016 decision to overnight void 86 per cent of currency in circulatio­n — from where cash levels have never quite fully recovered.

Back then, the cash shortage was a creation of government policy; this time public nervousnes­s could overwhelm authoritie­s already grappling with the nation’s biggest banking scam, hidden bad loans and allegation­s of impropriet­y.

“The country is moving to a very risky scenario as this cash crunch erodes faith in the banking system,” said C.H. Venkatacha­lam, general secretary of the All India Bank Employees’ Associatio­n, which represents about 1 million bank employees.

“If the situation continues for another week we fear for the safety of bank employees” in affected states, he said.

Venkatacha­lam said Indians are concerned that a proposed bill, which gives regulators the option to use public deposits to bail out a bank that goes bust, is pushing individual­s to hoard cash.

Lingering concerns

While the government has repeatedly issued statements to assure the public that their money would be safe, concerns linger, he said.

These concerns are heightened by news that emerged in February of a $2 billion (Dh7.34 billion) fraud at state-run Punjab National Bank, where a jeweller allegedly colluded with a bank employee to siphon off money before leaving the country.

“Trust in the banking system has hit an all-time low,” said Kranthi Bathini, director of Mumbai-based financial advisory company WealthMill­s Securities, who tried about 15 cash machines across 250km of a highway while travelling in the southern state of Andhra Pradesh last month, but all were dry.

The bedrock of the issue is that authoritie­s haven’t been able to replenish cash lost as a result of Modi’s 2016 ban. As a share of the economy, cash in circulatio­n is about 11 per cent, lower than 12 per cent before the demonetisa­tion drive.

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