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To mitigate hardships of the poor and marginal farmers due to the cash deficit following demonetisation, the Reserve Bank on Tuesday directed banks to distribute at least 40 percent of currency notes in rural areas.
The 50-day period for ensuring normalcy ended on 30 December, but the cash supply situation is yet to ease in certain pockets. As a result, the government has not lifted the withdrawal ceiling of Rs 24,000 per week.
On observing that the number of banknotes being supplied in rural areas is not commensurate with the local requirement, some steps have already been initiated, RBI said in a notification.
To mitigate the issue in a more enduring manner, the banks maintaining currency chests have been advised to take various steps, including liberal issuance of the existing stock of other denomination notes below Rs 100.
The directive came just a couple of days after Prime Minister Narendra Modi, in his address to the nation on New Year’s Eve, exhorted banks to make efforts to restore normalcy as fast as possible and asked them to focus on rural areas.
According to the statement, banks should follow a need-based approach for supply of currency as rural requirements could vary from district to district, depending on variations in the rural and urban mix of each district.
RBI has already mapped each district of every state and also made estimates of the requirements.
Accordingly, all banks operating in a district must issue banknotes to distribution channels in the indicated proportion, it said.
Banks should issue banknotes in denominations of Rs 500 and below, the RBI notification said.
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