No ₹2,000 notes printed last fiscal in policy shift
NEW DELHI: The Reserve Bank of India’s (RBI) currency note presses did not print even one ~2,000 note in 2019-20. This happened because they did not receive any order to do so. The trend seems to be in keeping with a conscious decision to bring down the share of ~2,000 notes in total currency under circulation, which has come down from at least 50% in 2016-17 to just 22% in 2019-20.
These figures have been reported in RBI’s Annual Report for 2019-20, which was released on August 25.
RBI has also disposed of a disproportionate share of ~2,000 notes in the soiled category. This raises questions about the government’s plan for the country’s highest denomination currency note. In January 2019, the government indicated that the printing of ~2,000 notes was being stopped as there was adequate supply.
“Printing of bank notes of particular denomination is decided by the government in consultation with RBI to maintain the desired denomination mix for facilitating transactional demand of public. No indent was placed with the presses for printing of ~2,000 denomination notes for 2019-20.However, there is no
decision to discontinue the printing of ~2,000 bank notes,” minister of state for finance Anurag Singh Thakur told the Lok Sabha on March 16, 2020.
~2000 notes were introduced after the government announced demonetisation of the old ~500 and ~1,000 notes on November 8, 2016. These two denominations accounted for 86% of the total currency in circulation when the policy was announced.
The number of ~2,000 notes peaked at 3.36 billion units (or pieces) in 2017-18. This number dropped to 3.29 billion in 2018-19. It has fallen again to 2.73 billion in 2019-20. The fall in number of ~2,000 notes in circulation is in keeping with the decline in orders for printing ~2,000 notes. RBI printed 3.5 billion ~2,000 notes in 2016-17. This came down to 151 million in 2017-18 and 47 million in 2018-19. No ~2,000 notes were printed in 2019-20.
RBI also seems to have disposed of a disproportionately high number of ~2,000 notes in 2019-20. A total of 176.8 million pieces of soiled ~2,000 notes were disposed of in 2019-20. Just one million ~2,000 notes were disposed of in 2018-19 and no ~2,000 notes were disposed of in 2016-17 or 2017-18. The share of disposed-of ~2,000 notes in the total ~2,000 notes under circulation in 2019-20 is 6.5%. This number is just 0.6% for ~500 notes. Both these notes were introduced together after demonetisation.
It is the ~500 notes which have gained at the cost of the ~2,000 notes. More than half of the 22 billion currency notes printed in 2019-20 were of the ~500 denomination. As a result of these changes in currency composition, the share of ~500 notes has reached an all-time high in the total currency in circulation.
(See chart: Share in total value of currency in circulation)
A government official said on condition of anonymity that the ~2,000 notes were introduced in 2016 to quickly fill the gap created by demonetisation of ~500 and ~1,000 notes. It was the need of the hour.
Gradually, with increased supply of smaller notes, including new notes of ~100 and ~200, and with the growing popularity of digital transactions, the urgency of issuing new ~2,000 notes is no longer there, the official said.
“But, this does not mean that there is any move to discontinue ~2,000 notes,” the official added. “Increasingly, commercial banks are also using more and more smaller notes because their customers often find difficulties in getting change for ~2,000 notes,” the official said.