The governor did not give specific answers on who initiated the note ban.
RBI Governor Urjit Patel
Unsatisfied with the responses of Reserve Bank of India (RBI) Governor Urjit Patel to
specific queries on demonetisation, the Public Accounts Committee (PAC)
of Parliament on Friday asked him to furnish written replies to the
concerns expressed by the members within two weeks and appear before the
panel again.
Patel, along with Deputy Governor R Gandhi and other senior functionaries, appeared before PAC for
oral evidence on “Review of Monetary Policy”. The governor did not give
specific answers on who initiated the note ban, how much cash had come
back into the banks and when the cash supply situation would normalise,
sources said.
During the four-hour-long meeting, Opposition members asked Patel
questions on the dent in the economy, job losses and the loss of over
100 lives allegedly caused by demonetisation. “He (Patel) said there may
be problems but we will overcome them,” said a member on the panel.
The RBI governor said
the central bank was in touch with the service providers of some online
payment platforms to reduce transaction cost. When a member pointed out
that the deposits in cooperative banks shot up around six times within
days of the note ban, Patel, said the RBI was looking into the matter.
To have further clarity on the impact of the note ban, PAC has
also asked Finance Secretary Ashok Lavasa, Economic Affairs Secretary
Shaktikanta Das, Revenue Secretary Hasmukh Adhia and Financial Services
Secretary Anjuly Chib Duggal to appear before it on February 20.
Also, more than 72 days after demonetisation, RBI, in a written answer
to queries raised earlier, said it still did not know the exact number
of junked currency notes that were in circulation and it is still
reconciling the number of notes that were deposited back.
The central bank said: “The exact number of specified bank notes withdrawn from circulation is being worked out.”
Earlier this week, Patel had told the Parliamentary Standing Committee
on Finance that new currency notes to the tune of Rs 9.2 lakh crore had
been introduced into the system after the removal of the old notes.
When a member wanted facilities for NRIs to deposit their old notes at
embassies, citing a pact with Nepal, Patel said he would look into it.
PAC was informed by RBI that the matter related to demonetisation was
under discussion between the government and RBI for “some months”,
following which the proposal was placed before the central board of RBI
on November 8 for consideration. The board recommended the proposal to
the government.
The Board meeting was attended by Governor Patel, two Deputy Governors
(Gandhi and S S Mundra), and five directors — Nachiket Mor, Bharat N
Doshi, Sudhir Mankad, Shaktikanta Das and Anjuly Chib Duggal.
Sources said Director N S Vishwanathan (deputy governor) did not
attend the meeting as he stayed back in Mumbai for “strategic reasons”
to brief the bankers first hand immediately after the decision on demonetisation was taken.
Another director, Natarajan Chandrasekaran, was abroad at the time of the meeting.
Defending the cash withdrawal limits imposed after the note ban on November 8, the RBI governor said,
“The ceiling on withdrawal was determined on the basis of availability,
past utilisation pattern and considering the needs of the common people
so that hardships are minimum.” The government has increased the cash
withdrawal limit from ATMs to Rs 10,000 per day but has not changed the
cap of Rs 24,000 from banks per week. In between, it has changed the
limits a number of times, as well as relaxations given on payments
through scrapped currency notes.
In his written reply, Patel pointed out that, in the past, people were
withdrawing Rs 12,000 or Rs 13,000 per week, and Rs 50,000 per month,
on an average. “He (Patel) said the benefits of the note ban will come
in the medium and long terms,” said another PAC member. As Opposition members lobbed queries at Patel, the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) members praised him for demonetisation and
maintaining secrecy in the matter. This provoked an Opposition member
to jokingly remark that the House should pass a vote of thanks for the
RBI chief.
As soon as the meeting began, K V Thomas, chairman of PAC and
a Congress MP, made a statement on demonetisation, prompting protests
from BJP members, including Bhupender Yadav, Kirit Somaiya and Nishikant
Dubey.
Citing the amendment in the RBI Act in 2016, they said any question
put to Patel must be in context of the central bank’s monetary policy
and not outside it.
After a long debate, the panel agreed that questions on demonetisation could
be asked but only in the context of monetary policy. It is learnt that
Patel said the cash flow position had largely improved in the country.
To questions on the impact of demonetisation on
growth, Patel said there might be impact in the short run, but in the
mid and long terms the move was beneficial for the economy.
Patel, along with Deputy Governor R Gandhi and other senior functionaries, appeared before PAC for
oral evidence on “Review of Monetary Policy”. The governor did not give
specific answers on who initiated the note ban, how much cash had come
back into the banks and when the cash supply situation would normalise,
sources said.
During the four-hour-long meeting, Opposition members asked Patel
questions on the dent in the economy, job losses and the loss of over
100 lives allegedly caused by demonetisation. “He (Patel) said there may
be problems but we will overcome them,” said a member on the panel.
The RBI governor said
the central bank was in touch with the service providers of some online
payment platforms to reduce transaction cost. When a member pointed out
that the deposits in cooperative banks shot up around six times within
days of the note ban, Patel, said the RBI was looking into the matter.
To have further clarity on the impact of the note ban, PAC has
also asked Finance Secretary Ashok Lavasa, Economic Affairs Secretary
Shaktikanta Das, Revenue Secretary Hasmukh Adhia and Financial Services
Secretary Anjuly Chib Duggal to appear before it on February 20.
Also, more than 72 days after demonetisation, RBI, in a written answer
to queries raised earlier, said it still did not know the exact number
of junked currency notes that were in circulation and it is still
reconciling the number of notes that were deposited back.
The central bank said: “The exact number of specified bank notes withdrawn from circulation is being worked out.”
Earlier this week, Patel had told the Parliamentary Standing Committee
on Finance that new currency notes to the tune of Rs 9.2 lakh crore had
been introduced into the system after the removal of the old notes.
When a member wanted facilities for NRIs to deposit their old notes at
embassies, citing a pact with Nepal, Patel said he would look into it.
PAC was informed by RBI that the matter related to demonetisation was
under discussion between the government and RBI for “some months”,
following which the proposal was placed before the central board of RBI
on November 8 for consideration. The board recommended the proposal to
the government.
The Board meeting was attended by Governor Patel, two Deputy Governors
(Gandhi and S S Mundra), and five directors — Nachiket Mor, Bharat N
Doshi, Sudhir Mankad, Shaktikanta Das and Anjuly Chib Duggal.
Sources said Director N S Vishwanathan (deputy governor) did not
attend the meeting as he stayed back in Mumbai for “strategic reasons”
to brief the bankers first hand immediately after the decision on demonetisation was taken.
Another director, Natarajan Chandrasekaran, was abroad at the time of the meeting.
Defending the cash withdrawal limits imposed after the note ban on November 8, the RBI governor said,
“The ceiling on withdrawal was determined on the basis of availability,
past utilisation pattern and considering the needs of the common people
so that hardships are minimum.” The government has increased the cash
withdrawal limit from ATMs to Rs 10,000 per day but has not changed the
cap of Rs 24,000 from banks per week. In between, it has changed the
limits a number of times, as well as relaxations given on payments
through scrapped currency notes.
In his written reply, Patel pointed out that, in the past, people were
withdrawing Rs 12,000 or Rs 13,000 per week, and Rs 50,000 per month,
on an average. “He (Patel) said the benefits of the note ban will come
in the medium and long terms,” said another PAC member. As Opposition members lobbed queries at Patel, the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) members praised him for demonetisation and
maintaining secrecy in the matter. This provoked an Opposition member
to jokingly remark that the House should pass a vote of thanks for the
RBI chief.
As soon as the meeting began, K V Thomas, chairman of PAC and
a Congress MP, made a statement on demonetisation, prompting protests
from BJP members, including Bhupender Yadav, Kirit Somaiya and Nishikant
Dubey.
Citing the amendment in the RBI Act in 2016, they said any question
put to Patel must be in context of the central bank’s monetary policy
and not outside it.
After a long debate, the panel agreed that questions on demonetisation could
be asked but only in the context of monetary policy. It is learnt that
Patel said the cash flow position had largely improved in the country.
To questions on the impact of demonetisation on
growth, Patel said there might be impact in the short run, but in the
mid and long terms the move was beneficial for the economy.
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