Friday, 2 December 2016

Cash crunch will ease by year-end: Jaitley

Finance Minister Arun Jaitley said on Friday that cash crunch following the scrapping of high-value banknotes would ease by Dec. 30 with the release of new 500 and 2,000 rupee notes.

Mr. Jaitley said, however, that the amount of new bank notes being released would not be the same as that circulating before Nov. 8, when Prime Minister Narendra Modi announced the demonetisation, a move aimed at purging the black money.

Mr. Modi, at a stroke, removed from circulation banknotes worth an estimated 17 trillion rupees. Finance ministry sources say they plan to reissue just over half of this - a task that would take months given the capacity of four currency notes printing presses.

Mr. Modi set a 50-day deadline that runs to Dec. 30 for people to swap or deposit their old notes. He has promised the situation would stabilise by then and urged Indians to adopt cashless payment forms such as debit cards and mobile wallets.

“Obviously, one of the advantages of this exercise is going to be that you won't have the same level of paper currency which existed,” Mr. Jaitley told the Hindustan Times Leadership Summit.

Officials expect some illicit cash never to be returned and to expire worthless, while other money that is deposited will remain in the banking system. The government's goal is to encourage the use of cashless forms of payment, a challenge for most Indians who live and work in the informal economy.

The dislocation resulting from the cash swap has been huge - workers seeking to collect their monthly pay have been turned away as banks ran out of cash, while car makers have reported a steep downturn in their November sales.

“It does create a disruption,” said Mr. Jaitley. “But I don't see the disruption lasting for very long. You may see some impact for a quarter or so.”

Mr. Jaitley also repudiated a call by West Bengal government to delay the Goods and Services Tax (GST) roll-out to avoid inflicting another economic shock in the wake of demonetisation.

He said the plan was still to launch the new tax on April 1. Time was tight because, under a constitutional amendment that enabled the GST, old system of indirect taxation would lapse next September.

Source:The Hindu

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