RBI may be holding back printed ₹2,000 notes: SBI report
A part of the ₹2,000 denomination currency notes printed so far is possibly being held back by the central bank, a recent report from State Bank of India indicated. The high-value note was introduced for the first time last year after the withdrawal of ₹500 and ₹1,000 notes.
The report, authored by the bank’s chief economist, Soumya Kanti Ghosh, cited data submitted by Finance Ministry to the Lok Sabha which said the value of ₹2,000 notes were ₹7,308 billion as on December 8, while the value of small denomination currency in circulation up to March 2017 was ₹3,501 billion, according to RBI’s annual report.
“...it is safe to assume that ₹2,463 billion may be on the lower side as the RBI must have printed notes of small denomination in the interregnum (₹50 and ₹200),” it said. Mr. Ghosh said that as the ₹2,000 denomination led to challenges in transactions, it ‘seemed that RBI may have either consciously stopped printing’ these notes ‘or is printing them in smaller numbers after the initial print run to normalise the liquidity situation’.
A part of the ₹2,000 denomination currency notes printed so far is possibly being held back by the central bank, a recent report from State Bank of India indicated. The high-value note was introduced for the first time last year after the withdrawal of ₹500 and ₹1,000 notes.
The report, authored by the bank’s chief economist, Soumya Kanti Ghosh, cited data submitted by Finance Ministry to the Lok Sabha which said the value of ₹2,000 notes were ₹7,308 billion as on December 8, while the value of small denomination currency in circulation up to March 2017 was ₹3,501 billion, according to RBI’s annual report.
“...it is safe to assume that ₹2,463 billion may be on the lower side as the RBI must have printed notes of small denomination in the interregnum (₹50 and ₹200),” it said. Mr. Ghosh said that as the ₹2,000 denomination led to challenges in transactions, it ‘seemed that RBI may have either consciously stopped printing’ these notes ‘or is printing them in smaller numbers after the initial print run to normalise the liquidity situation’.