Out of cash. A month after demonetisation this sign continues to greet people across the country at banks as well as ATM kiosks.
Cash is hard to come by. Or is it?
More than 85,000 new Rs 2,000 notes — enough to fill 141 ATMs — have been confiscated over suspicion that they were acquired illegally in connivance with bank officials.
The government’s November 8 decision to scrap Rs 500 and Rs 1,000 banknotes, which accounted for 86% of the currency in circulation, and restrictions on cash withdrawals has led to a cash crunch, forcing people to stand in lines for hours, sometimes even overnight.
But not everyone is struggling.
ncome tax data reveals that nearly Rs 17. 2 crore have been seized in 2000-rupee bills. The 2000-rupee note was the first to be introduced after the currency cull, followed by a new Rs 500 bill.
Announcing the currency recall, the government allowed a one-time exchange of Rs 4,000 but the swap was discontinued as reports of bank officials colluding with customers to change big amounts trickled in.
The first such instance was in Delhi when two people were arrested with Rs 3.5 crore a few days after demonetisation. A probe found out that two Axis Bank officials helped convert Rs 30 crore in new currency.
The Intelligence Bureau alerted home ministry and revenue department that bank officials were colluding with hawala operators to convert old currencies for a commission ranging from 15 % to 30 %.
As many as 138,626 bank branches -- private and public – were and some post offices carried out the exchange. The worry is the rot could be widespread.
The government has been saying the short-term pain will bring long-term gains by stamping out black money and corruption. But the seizures have raised concerns if the banking system has compromised the effort.
A raid on an Axis Bank branch in Delhi’s Chandni Chowk unearthed 44 fake accounts. Around Rs 100 crore were deposited in these accounts in old notes, officials said on Friday.
In Chennai, Rs 10 crore in 2,000-rupee notes were seized from a businessman. He had 50,000 bills of Rs 2,000 on him against the withdrawal limit of Rs 24,000, or 12 notes of 2,000, per account per week.
Countrywide Rs 242 crore in new currency and jewellery worth Rs 15 crore has been seized. The amount is not abnormally high, as I-T sleuths annually unearth Rs 10,500 crore to Rs 11,000 crore in undisclosed income. But, what it is baffling is the seizure of new notes.
On Friday alone, bundles of Rs 2000 were seized from across the country. Five men were arrested in Mumbai for carrying Rs 72 lakhs in 2,000-rupee notes. In Gujarat’s Surat, Rs 76 lakhs were found in a car.
-HT
Cash is hard to come by. Or is it?
More than 85,000 new Rs 2,000 notes — enough to fill 141 ATMs — have been confiscated over suspicion that they were acquired illegally in connivance with bank officials.
The government’s November 8 decision to scrap Rs 500 and Rs 1,000 banknotes, which accounted for 86% of the currency in circulation, and restrictions on cash withdrawals has led to a cash crunch, forcing people to stand in lines for hours, sometimes even overnight.
But not everyone is struggling.
ncome tax data reveals that nearly Rs 17. 2 crore have been seized in 2000-rupee bills. The 2000-rupee note was the first to be introduced after the currency cull, followed by a new Rs 500 bill.
Announcing the currency recall, the government allowed a one-time exchange of Rs 4,000 but the swap was discontinued as reports of bank officials colluding with customers to change big amounts trickled in.
The first such instance was in Delhi when two people were arrested with Rs 3.5 crore a few days after demonetisation. A probe found out that two Axis Bank officials helped convert Rs 30 crore in new currency.
The Intelligence Bureau alerted home ministry and revenue department that bank officials were colluding with hawala operators to convert old currencies for a commission ranging from 15 % to 30 %.
As many as 138,626 bank branches -- private and public – were and some post offices carried out the exchange. The worry is the rot could be widespread.
The government has been saying the short-term pain will bring long-term gains by stamping out black money and corruption. But the seizures have raised concerns if the banking system has compromised the effort.
A raid on an Axis Bank branch in Delhi’s Chandni Chowk unearthed 44 fake accounts. Around Rs 100 crore were deposited in these accounts in old notes, officials said on Friday.
In Chennai, Rs 10 crore in 2,000-rupee notes were seized from a businessman. He had 50,000 bills of Rs 2,000 on him against the withdrawal limit of Rs 24,000, or 12 notes of 2,000, per account per week.
Countrywide Rs 242 crore in new currency and jewellery worth Rs 15 crore has been seized. The amount is not abnormally high, as I-T sleuths annually unearth Rs 10,500 crore to Rs 11,000 crore in undisclosed income. But, what it is baffling is the seizure of new notes.
On Friday alone, bundles of Rs 2000 were seized from across the country. Five men were arrested in Mumbai for carrying Rs 72 lakhs in 2,000-rupee notes. In Gujarat’s Surat, Rs 76 lakhs were found in a car.
-HT
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