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Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s controversial policy of demonetisation has raised several issues in the Parliament, as the Opposition protests the currency ban.
It’s no secret that former Reserve Bank of India governor, Raghuram Rajan, was opposed to the idea of demonetisation. But a letter, dated as late as 15 March 2016, put on paper the RBI’s unambiguous stance on the currency ban.
Ideologically, too, Rajan had been opposed to the concept of demonetisation. While he has not commented on the government’s current decision, in 2014, Rajan, in a public lecture, questioned the effectiveness of demonetisation.
Top sources in the RBI told The Quint:
The entire process went on fast track once Rajan was succeeded by Urjit Patel whose signature appears on the new currency notes.
The PM and senior bureaucrats went ahead and gave instructions for printing of the new Rs 500 and Rs 2,000 denomination notes, which began “five to six months ago,” the source said. Rajan did not come in the way of the government, the source added.
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