Amid cash crunch, govt to raise printing of Rs 500 notes by five times

Garg attributed this sudden cash demand to localised phenomenon

IANS  |  New Delhi 

To meet the "unusual" demand in the country, the government has decided to increase printing of Rs 500 by five times, Economic Affairs Secretary said here on Tuesday.

"We have taken steps to increase the supply of in case the demand were to go up further. To give you an example, Rs 500 -- we print about 5 billion of per day. We have taken steps to raise this production five times," Garg said at a press meet called to calm fears after reports of shortages emerged from several parts of the country.

"Very soon, in the next couple of days, we will have a supply of about Rs 25 billion worth of Rs 500 per day. In a month, supply would be about Rs 700-750 billion. These alone can more than meet the demand of any month," he said.

Garg asserted that there was no in the country, pointing out that currently around Rs 18 trillion worth of was in circulation -- a little over what was in circulation at the time of

"We keep Rs 2.5-3 trillin more in stock for excess demand. In the last few days, we have pumped cash into the system to meet the demand. We still have a reserve of Rs 1.75 trillion."

He said there was "unusually high demand" for in the last couple of months. As opposed to an average demand of about Rs 200 billion a month, "in the first 13 days of April itself there was a demand of Rs 450 billion", he said.

Garg attributed this sudden cash demand to localised phenomenon.

"This unusual spurt in demand is seen more in some parts of the country like Andhra Pradesh, Telangana, Karnataka, and Bihar," the Finance Ministry said in a statement on Tuesday.

"We have noted that this is coming more from some parts of the country. There might also be some sort of a feeling in some people that if the cash runs out, why not keep it in reserve so it may be safe... a kind of 'shortage mentality'. But believe us, there is no shortage, there is no cash crunch," he said.

"There is no shortage of in stock, there is no shortage of cash being printed... Therefore I would urge... every citizen not to hoard or stock cash -- it is not required. You are unnecessarily raising your risks. We have adequate cash, but the preferable mode of use is digitisation, so use it," Garg added.

Asked whether there was any hoarding of the Rs 2,000 notes, he said: "In this system, there are about 6.70 lakh crore worth of Rs 2,000 They are more than adequate to meet the transaction demand of customers... But, off late, we have noted somewhat lesser inflow coming back from circulation.

"We have not got this investigated, but you can assume that this one note is most suitable for people to keep with themselves. There has been some tendency of some people using Rs 2,000 notes, but that does not affect the overall supply of the Rs 2,000 "

Justifying the higher circulation in the system compared to the pre-period, Garg said: "At the time of demonetisation, the in circulation Rs 17.5 trillion. in circulation now is about Rs 18 trillion. So it is in absolute numbers higher than at the time of "

"But is one-and-a-half years earlier... if we had taken that growth path, we would had still been much higher. If the had grown as it was growing before demonetisation, probably it would have been somewhere at the level of Rs 22-23 trillion. So, we are at a lower level."

First Published: Tue, April 17 2018. 16:35 IST