After the big Indian notes, now it's time for 10 rupee note
to get a new makeover. According to reports, the Reserve Bank of India is all
set to issue new Rs 10 notes under the Mahatma Gandhi series with chocolate
brown colour as the base.
According to News18, around 1 billion pieces of the new 10
rupee note has already been printed by the apex bank. Last week itself the new
design was approved by the government. The old Rs 10 note was last redesigned
in 2005.
In August, 2017, new Rs 50 and Rs 200 notes were introduced
in the Mahatma Gandhi series. In order to get rid of counterfeiting and promote
a less-cash economy, the move to reintroduce lower denomination notes in a new
design was made.
At 10 pm on November 8, India's Prime Minister Narendra Modi
announced that on the stroke of midnight, all 500 and 1,000 rupee notes -- 86
per cent of the currency in circulation -- would cease to become legal tender.
Up to that point, upwards of 95 per cent of all transactions
in India were conducted in cash and 90 per cent of vendors didn't have the
means to accept anything. On top of this, 85 per cent of workers were paid
exclusively in cash and almost half of the population didn't even have bank
accounts.
Demonetisation proved to be a major disruption in the Indian
economy and brought great hardship to people who spent hours in the serpentine
queue to get Rs 500 and Rs 1,000 notes exchanged or deposited in their bank
accounts.
Later, Reserve Bank of India (RBI) said in its Annual Report
for 2016-17 that 99 per cent of the junked Rs 500 and 1,000 notes were returned
to the banking system. This led many, including Opposition leaders. questioning
the very logic of demonetisation.
An estimated Rs 15.4 lakh crore worth old Rs 500 and Rs
1,000 notes had been demonetised on November 8. But, return of about 99 per
cent demonetised currency to banks does not necessarily makes demonetisation a
failure.
However, beyond the political statements, even those made by
Prime Minister Narendra Modi and his ministers, there are several effects of
demonetisation that may augur well for the economy in the long run.
No comments:
Post a Comment