NEW DELHI, 20 May: The Reserve Bank of India’s (RBI) decision to withdraw Rs 2,000 currency notes from circulation will not have any “perceptible effect” on the economy as any such notes returned will be replaced by either equivalent cash in lower denomination notes or a deposit, former NITI Aayog vice chairman Arvind Panagariya has said.
Panagariya further said that the likely motive behind this move is to make the movement of illicit money more difficult.
“We will not see any perceptible effect on the economy. Any currency in Rs 2,000 notes returned will be replaced by either equivalent cash in lower denomination notes or a deposit. So money supply will not be impacted,” he told PTI.
Panagariya noted that Rs 2,000 currency notes represent only 10.8 percent of the cash currently in the hands of the public and probably most of it is being used for illicit transactions.
The RBI on Friday announced withdrawal of Rs 2,000 currency notes from circulation, and existing notes in circulation can either be deposited in bank accounts or exchanged by 30 September. The bank notes in Rs 2,000 denomination will continue to be a legal tender, the RBI had said in a statement.
Asked whether the public will face inconvenience due to this move, the eminent economist said many citizens probably have no Rs 2,000 notes since few transactions take place in those notes.
“For those who do, inconvenience will not be beyond an extra trip to the bank. Even that can be avoided by exchanging Rs 2,000 notes when visiting the bank for some other transaction,” he said.
Asked if there is a need for Rs 1,000 currency notes, Panagariya said, “As of now, I do not see a need to issue Rs 1,000 notes as citizens have become used to transact in notes of Rs 500 or lower denomination.”
The RBI started printing Rs 2,000 notes in November 2016 after Prime Minister Narendra Modi scrapped high-value Rs 1,000 and Rs 500 notes overnight.
Panagariya opined that one lesson of November 2016 demonetization was that tracing black money is incredibly difficult.
“The most you can do is to make future illicit transactions more difficult by eliminating high denomination notes,” he said. (PTI)