Tag

Demonetisation

All articles tagged with #demonetisation

finance2 years ago

India's Cash Dominance Challenged as UPI Transactions Skyrocket

Despite the growth of digital payments in India, cash continues to hold ground as a valuable financial saving and store of value for most Indians. The currency in circulation grew by over 16.6% in 2020-21, while digital transactions soared, with UPI transactions surpassing a trillion dollars. This simultaneous growth of cash and digital payments is referred to as a "currency demand" paradox. Cash is preferred for minor purchases, and falling interest rates, a large informal economy, and expanded direct benefit cash transfers during the pandemic have contributed to the increased preference for cash. Unaccounted-for cash still flows into political campaign coffers and real estate transactions, highlighting the continued significance of cash in these sectors.

finance2 years ago

Assessing the Impact of India's Rs 2,000 Note Withdrawal

The RBI's decision to withdraw Rs 2,000 notes will likely be a "non-event" due to the rise of digital transactions in India, according to an SBI Research report. The report said that the decision will actually have a favourable bearing on liquidity, bank deposits and interest rates. The share of small denomination notes (upto Rs 100) in total has declined progressively to 9.0% from 26.7% in 2017 in value terms and to 58.8% from 90.8% in 2017 in volume terms. Meanwhile, UPI has emerged as the most popular and preferred payment mode in India accounting for about 73% of the total digital payments.

business2 years ago

"Indians turn to gold and digital payments as Rs 2,000 notes phased out"

Indians are finding ways to offload Rs 2,000 notes before they are withdrawn by the Reserve Bank of India. People are buying premium branded goods, rushing to petrol pumps, and even using the notes to pay for mangoes. Some shops are eagerly accepting the notes, while others are not. Fuel pumps are also seeing long queues with people using the notes to fill their tanks. The notes can be exchanged or deposited till September 30, 2023.

finance2 years ago

RBI's Calibrated Exit of Rs 2,000 Notes Improves Liquidity and Eases Short-Term Rates, Analysts Say.

The Reserve Bank of India's decision to withdraw its highest denomination currency note from circulation is expected to improve banking system liquidity, bringing down recently elevated short-term rates, according to analysts and bankers. The value of such notes in circulation is INR 3.6tn ($44.02bn). Kotak Institutional Equities estimates that liquidity could improve by around INR 1tn, while QuantEco Research pegs the potential liquidity impact at INR 400bn to INR 1.1tn. Most economists expect the note withdrawal to be less disruptive for the economy than the 2016 demonetisation.

politics2 years ago

India's Rs 2,000 notes face withdrawal and opposition criticism.

Opposition parties, including Congress, CPI, CPI(M), and AAP, criticized Prime Minister Narendra Modi over the RBI's announcement of withdrawing Rs 2,000 currency notes from circulation. Congress called it a "typical" move of Modi's "first act, second think" method and said demonetisation has come full circle. Left parties attacked the government over the issue, and the TMC questioned the BJP's "Modinomic masterstroke." The RBI announced that existing Rs 2,000 notes in circulation can either be deposited in bank accounts or exchanged by September 30.

politics2 years ago

India withdraws Rs 2000 notes from circulation, sparking controversy.

The Congress party criticized Prime Minister Narendra Modi over the RBI's announcement to withdraw Rs 2,000 currency notes from circulation, calling it a "second demonetisation disaster". Congress leaders slammed the move, with one MP saying it was the beginning of a second demonetisation disaster, while another said the "ghost of 8th Nov 2016 has come back to haunt the nation once again". The Rs 2,000 denomination bank note was introduced in November 2016 after the withdrawal of legal tender status of all Rs 500 and Rs 1,000 bank notes.