The Asian Age

99% of banned notes are back in system: RBI

- AGE CORRESPOND­ENT

The demonetisa­tion of the `500 and `1,000 currency notes announced in November 2016 appears to have failed to achieve the desired results as the provisiona­l data released by the Reserve Bank of India on Wednesday showed that around 98.96 per cent of the banned notes came back into the banking system. In its annual report for 2016-17, the central bank said that `15.28 lakh crores out of `15.44 lakh crores of the banned currency notes were deposited as of June 30, 2017. However, the Reserve Bank noted that these figures were provisiona­l and could change once the verificati­on process for the numerical accuracy and authentici­ty of the deposited notes are completed.

The RBI data also showed that `8,900 crores worth of currency notes in the denominati­on of `1,000 were in circulatio­n as of March 2017 despite having ceased to exist as legal tender. | |

Stating that the total expenditur­e incurred on security printing stood at `7,965 crores for the period from July 2016 to June 2017, against `3,420 crores in 2015-16, the RBI said the remonetisa­tion continued at a steady pace with the total notes in circulatio­n increasing to `15.06 lakh crores as on June 30, 2017. This is

Continued from Page 1 about 85 per cent of the total notes in circulatio­n as on November 4, 2016.

Interestin­gly, the RBI report also highlighte­d the significan­t growth in the number of counterfei­t currency notes detected by various banks. During FY17, altogether 762,072 counterfei­t notes were detected in the banking system, of which 95.7 per cent were detected by commercial banks. The detection of counterfei­t notes was 20.4 per cent higher than the previous year. Barring `100 notes, the detection of counterfei­t notes increased across denominati­ons.

The report also noted that the value of banknotes in circulatio­n declined by 20.2 per cent over the year to `13.10 lakh crores as on March 31, 2017. The volume of banknotes, however, increased by 11.1 per cent, mainly due to higher infusion of banknotes of lower denominati­on in circulatio­n after the demonetisa­tion.

In value terms, the share of notes of `500 and above, which had together accounted for 86.4 per cent of the total value of banknotes in circulatio­n at end-March 2016, came down to 73.4 per cent as of March 2017. The share of the newly-introduced `2,000 banknotes in the total value of banknotes in circulatio­n was 50.2 per cent at end-March 2017.

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