Oman Daily Observer

No news on Rs 2,000 note, Rs 200 to be issued soon

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NEW DELHI: With rumours of the Centre planning a withdrawal of the newly-introduced Rs 2,000 note doing the rounds, Minister of State for Finance Santosh Kumar Gangwar has said there was no news of its scrapping, adding the Rs 200 note will be in circulatio­n soon.

“No news that Rs 2,000 will be scrapped,” Gangwar said in an interview.

“The reduction in printing of new Rs 2,000 notes is a separate issue. But that needs to be confirmed by the Reserve Bank of India (RBI). RBI will give informatio­n on Rs 2,000 notes,” he added.

According to media reports, the government has stopped further printing of the recently printed Rs 2,000 notes.

On July 26, the issue was raised in Parliament when the opposition asked Finance Minister Arun Jaitley to confirm if the government was going to “demonetise Rs 2,000 notes” and if its printing had been stopped. The minister declined to reply.

Industry experts said the government was aiming to limit the circulatio­n of high denominati­on Rs 2,000 note, which would remain a legal tender, but not demonetise it. The circulatio­n of smaller denominati­on notes would be increased by introducin­g a new Rs 200 note.

Gangwar said that Rs 200 note, printing of which had already begun, would be in circulatio­n soon. The move to introduce Rs 200 note was to increase the circulatio­n of smaller denominati­on notes, he added.

A top government official, on condition of anonymity, said that the Rs 200 note would be introduced in the markets in August.

“The paper for Rs 200 notes was ready in the Mysuru paper mill in June. It should be in circulatio­n next month,” the official said.

The Mysuru paper mill is joint venture of Security Printing and Minting Corp of India Ltd (SMPCIL) and Bharatiya Reserve Bank Note Mudran, a wholly-owned subsidiary of RBI.

The Rs 200 new note was being printed in the RBI printing press. India has four currency note printing pressess — two RBI presses at Mysuru (Karnataka) and Salboni (West Bengal) and two Security Printing and Minting Corp of India Ltd (SMPCIL) presses at Nashik (Maharashtr­a) and Dewas (Madhya Pradesh). SPMCIL is a public sector unit.

Lauding the introducti­on of Rs 200 note, a State Bank of India (SBI) report recently said that it would serve as the “missing middle”.

“It seems that there has been a significan­t move towards relocating distributi­on of currency towards smaller denominati­ons post demonetisa­tion. However, while such a move is laudable and consistent with the long-term vision of a less cash economy, we need to consider the following issues.

“Though the number of small denominati­on notes has increased, the mismatch caused by the presence of Rs 2,000 denominati­on straight after Rs 500 denominati­on is causing difficulti­es in exchanging the high denominati­on notes,” the SBI Ecowrap report noted.

Post-demonetisa­tion, there were reports of people facing problems in using the Rs 2,000 note as sufficient quantum of smaller denominati­on notes of Rs 100 and Rs 500 were not available.

The government had brought in the Rs 2,000 note immediatel­y after November 8, 2016 demonetisa­tion to expedite remonetisa­tion.

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