The New Mysore Printed Notes |
The historical
town also had a small, sleepy airport which could be used to fly aircraft to
ferry the notes to major centres where RBI had currency chests. However, this
need to keep secrecy mean that only 48 crore Rs 2000 notes and an equal number
of Rs 500 notes could be manufactured and printed in the four to five months that led up to the
sudden demonetisation of the money.
The total value
of the new notes printed being just Rs 120,000 crore. The problem that the
Government faced was that when it demonetised all Rs 500 and Rs 1000 notes, it
sucked out some 86 % of all money in circulation in the country. With some 16
lakh crore rupees worth of money in circulation, this meant that 13.76 lakh
crore rupees was being sucked out.
The replacement
money was just not in place to take care of the huge demand.
Till now banks
have been able to dispense just about Rs 50,000 crore worth of money. Except a few top officials in North Block,
the prime minster, the finance minister
and home minister, as well as the RBI Governor, very few officials were kept in
the loop.
Officials who
were in the know seemed to have been in a hurry to get the scheme going instead
of taking stock of the logistics which needed to be worked out for such a huge
operation. Hopefully in the weeks ahead things will improve as more security
presses including Bengal’s Salboni are pressed into action.
The secrecy again
meant that not too large a stash of extra Rs 100 notes could be printed and
kept in storage. Added to that was the imperative of another decision prompted
by intelligence inputs that Rs 100 notes too had been counterfeited by the
secret service of a neighbouring country. “It has been decided in principle to
replace all notes in a gradual manner,”
said officials. Some 6-7 % of all Indian notes in circulation are believed to
be counterfeit, and this was probably the driving reason for the note
replacement excercise.
For the ordinary
citizen of course to the `pain’ of sudden demonetisation, was the added discomfort
of non-functional automatic teller machines. Again secrecy meant banks were not
told to recaliberate ATMs which dish out notes to recognise the new notes.
All ATMs in India
need to be calibrated afresh to recognise the new notes by their weight, dimensions, design, and security
features. Bankers say this could take over a month to complete as some 2 lakh
ATMs will have to be worked on. Finance Ministry is working to a deadline of 3
weeks.
The
recaliberation, Which would involve readjusting the cash trays, or cassettes,
and the software running the machines, has to be done by technicians and takes
about 4 man hours of work on each ATM. This translates to some 8 lakh man hours
of work. With security cleared technicians in short supply, this means long
work hours and the possibility of the 3 week deadline being missed, admit
officials.
Till then, as
consumers of money, citizens will have to grin and bear the “pain”.