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It has been five months since demonetisation was announced. Three-fourths of the amount of currency in circulation that was withdrawn has been replaced. As of last count, over Rs 13 lakh crore in currency was available in the system as compared to just under Rs 18 lakh crore before demonetisation.
Each of these facts suggest that availability of cash should now be near normal and lines at ATMs should be a thing of the past.
It was certainly that way till March. Early April, however, has seen some return of cash shortages, according to anecdotal reports which have been confirmed by banking and cash management industry officials.
CMS Infosystems Pvt, India’s largest cash management firm, says that there has been a decline in the amount of cash being transported in April. A company spokesperson told BloombergQuint that, nationwide, the company transported 20 percent less cash in the first week of April compared to the first week of March. This is likely to have been the case in the second week of April as well, said the spokesperson.
Bankers that BloombergQuint spoke to had different explanations. One pointed to a regional problem with a surge in cash demand reported from the Andhra Pradesh and Telangana regions. Another said that supply has slowed as the currency printing presses may be working fewer shifts. A third pointed to possible hoarding of cash. A fourth said he was as confused as everyone else.
The one thing they all accepted, though, was that a shortage of cash has re-emerged, albeit temporarily.
Another senior banker, requesting anonymity, said that some mismatch has been created because the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) has been concentrating on printing more small value notes.
In the early days after demonetisation was announced, the RBI was focused on printing Rs 2,000 notes to quickly replenish the value of currency available. However, since one goal of demonetisation is typically to reduce the proportion of high-value notes in the economy (as these can be used as a store of illegal wealth), the central bank may have since then re-calibrated the printing towards lower value notes.
According to a third person, working with a large private sector bank, at present the RBI is able to meet only 15-25 percent of banks’ requirements through fresh supply of notes. The person spoke on the condition of anonymity.
Talk of a shortage of cash is, in a sense, compounding the problem, said SBI’s Kumar, who believes that people are withdrawing more than they need.
“What happens is that when there is a feeling that there is a shortage of currency, then people begin to keep it with themselves, not spend, and not bring it to the bank,” said Kumar. He added that for SBI, at present, the outgo of currency is more than what is being received by way of cash deposits.
While the recent shortage in cash supply is being attributed to various reasons, the slower pace of remonetisation has been confirmed by recent data releases.
In an interview with BloombergQuint last week, former RBI Deputy Governor R Gandhi cautioned authorities against maintaining an artificial shortage of cash.
“If a public service authority, the government or the Reserve Bank, decide to have an artificial control on currency to force the people to go for an alternate course of payment, that will not work,” said Gandhi while adding that you can’t compel citizens to move away from cash. “Cash is a reality. It will continue,” said Gandhi.
(This article was first published on BloombergQuint.)
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