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2016 Indian banknote demonetisation

On 8 November 2016, the Government of India announced the demonetisation of all ₹500 and ₹1,000 banknotes of the Mahatma Gandhi Series. It also announced the issuance of new ₹500 and ₹2,000 banknotes in exchange for the demonetised banknotes.[1] Prime Minister Narendra Modi claimed that the action would curtail the shadow economy, increase cashless transactions and reduce the use of illicit and counterfeit cash to fund illegal activity and terrorism.[2][3][4]

2016 Indian banknote demonetisation
Queues outside a bank to exchange demonetised banknotes in Kolkata on 10 November 2016
Date8 November 2016 (6 years ago) (2016-11-08)
Time20:15 IST (14:45 UTC)
LocationIndia
MotiveCurbing black money

The announcement of demonetisation was followed by prolonged cash shortages in the weeks that followed, which created significant disruption throughout the economy.[5][6][7][8][9][10] People seeking to exchange their banknotes had to stand in lengthy queues, and several deaths were linked to the rush to exchange cash.[11][12]

According to a 2018 report from the Reserve Bank of India ₹15.3 trillion of the ₹15.41 trillion in demonetised bank notes, or approximately 99.3%, were deposited in banks, leading analysts to state that the effort had failed to remove black money from the economy.[13][14] The BSE SENSEX and NIFTY 50 stock indices fell over 6 percent on the day after the announcement.[15] The move reduced the country's industrial production and its GDP growth rate.[16] It is estimated that 1.5 million jobs were lost.[17] The move also saw a significant increase in digital and cashless transactions throughout the country.[18]

Initially, the move received support from some central bankers as well as from some international commentators. The move was also criticised as poorly planned and unfair, and was met with protests, litigation, and strikes against the government in several places across India. Debates also took place concerning the move in both houses of Parliament.[19][20][21][22]

Background

The Indian government had demonetised banknotes on two prior occasions—once in 1946 and once in 1978—and in both cases, the goal was to combat tax evasion via "black money" held outside the formal economic system.[23] In 1978, the Janata Party coalition government demonetised banknotes of ₹1,000, ₹5,000 and ₹10,000, again in the hopes of curbing counterfeit money and black money.[24]

In 2012, the Central Board of Direct Taxes recommended against demonetisation, saying in a report that "demonetisation may not be a solution for tackling black money or shadow economy, which is largely held in the form of benami properties, bullion and jewelry."[25][26] According to data from income tax probes, black money holders kept only 6% or less of their wealth as cash, suggesting that targeting this cash would not be a successful strategy.[27]

Demonetisation process

 
 
Demonetised ₹500 and ₹1,000 banknotes of the Mahatma Gandhi Series

Preparation and announcement

The plan to demonetise the ₹500 and ₹1,000 banknotes was initiated between six and ten months before it was a report by the State Bank of India (SBI) analysed possible strategies and effects of demonetisation.[28] In May 2016, the Reserve Bank of India had started preparing for new banknotes and confirmed the design of ₹2,000 banknotes in August 2016. The printing of new banknotes started in October when the news stories of forthcoming new banknotes appeared in the media.[29][30][31] On 27 October 2016, the Hindi daily Dainik Jagran published a report quoting RBI sources speaking of the forthcoming of ₹2,000 banknotes alongside withdrawal of ₹500 and ₹1,000 banknotes.[32][33] On 21 October 2016, The Hindu Business Line had also published a report on the forthcoming ₹2,000 banknote.[34]

The Board of the Reserve Bank of India met on Nov 8th, 2016, 5:30 PM to consider a letter from the Ministry of Finance regarding demonetization. "Two key reasons for the proposal cited in the government letter were: (1) between 2011 and 2016, the supply of 500- and 1,000-rupee bills had grown by 76 and 108 percent, respectively, while India's economy had only grown by 30 percent during this period; and (2) cash typically facilitated "black money." The board was further told that the measure was also intended to encourage greater financial inclusion and to incentivize greater digitization of the economy. The board approved the proposal, but not before making a few trenchant comments. It noted that the measure may not have the desired effect on black money because most people do not hold undeclared wealth in cash. It further worried about the negative effects on growth that were likely to occur in the short run. Possibly the most damning observation was that the primary fact on which the government had based its proposal—that the supply of 500- and 1,000-rupee bills had far outstripped the growth rate of the economy—was simply wrong. The board pointed out the embarrassing fact that the government had compared GDP growth in real terms with the growth of currency supply in nominal terms. In fact, nominal GDP growth had summed to over 80 percent between 2011 and 2016 and hence was in line with the growth of the currency bills to be demonetized."[35][36][37]

The Union cabinet was apprised of the plan on 8 November 2016 in a meeting in the evening convened by Prime Minister Modi.[38] Soon after the meeting, Modi announced the demonetisation in an unscheduled live national televised address at 20:15 IST.[39][40] He declared circulation of all ₹500 and ₹1,000 banknotes of the Mahatma Gandhi Series as invalid effective from the midnight of the same day, and announced the issuance of new ₹500 and ₹2,000 banknotes of the Mahatma Gandhi New Series in exchange for the demonetised banknotes.[41]

Information leak rumours

In an interview of prominent businessmen 'allegedly' claimed after the announcement of demonetisation that they had received prior tip-offs and rumours warning of the move and after seeing leaked photos of new ₹2,000 notes "knew what was coming", allowing them to preserve their money by converting it into smaller denominations.[42] A BJP MLA from Rajasthan, Bhawani Singh Rajawat, casually claimed in a video that wealthy businessmen were informed about the demonetisation before it occurred. He later denied making the comments.[43][44]

Cash exchange and withdrawal

 
People gathered at ATM of Axis Bank on 16 November 2016 in Mehsana, Gujarat to withdraw cash following deposit of demonetised banknotes in bank.

The Reserve Bank of India stipulated that the demonetised banknotes could be deposited with banks over a period of fifty days until 30 December 2016. The banknotes could also be exchanged for legal tender over the counter at all banks. The limit for such exchange was ₹4,000 per person from 8 to 13 November, was increased to ₹4,500 from 14 to 17 November, and reduced to ₹2,000 from 18 to 25 November.[1][45][46][47] The exchange of banknotes was stopped completely on 25 November, although the government had previously stated that the volume of exchange would be increased after that date.[48] International airports also facilitated an exchange of banknotes for foreign tourists and out-bound travellers, amounting to a total value of ₹5,000 per person.[49] Fuel pumps, government hospitals, railway and airline booking counters, state-government recognised dairies and ration stores, and crematoriums were allowed to accept the demonetised banknotes until 2 December 2016.[50]

Cash withdrawals from bank accounts were restricted to ₹10,000 per day and ₹20,000 per week per account from 10 to 13 November.[1] This limit was increased to ₹24,000 per week from 14 November 2016.[45][46] Limits on cash withdrawals from Current accounts/ Cash credit accounts/ Overdraft accounts were withdrawn later. RBI increased the withdrawal limit from Savings Bank account to ₹50,000 from the earlier ₹24,000 on 20 February 2017 and then on 13 March 2017, it removed all withdrawal limits from savings bank accounts.[51]

A daily limit on withdrawals from ATMs was also imposed varying from ₹2,000 per day until 14 November,[52] and ₹2,500 per day until 31 December.[45][46] This limit was increased to ₹4,500 per day from 1 January,[53] and again to ₹10,000 from 16 January 2017.[51] From 17 November, families were allowed to withdraw ₹250,000 for wedding expenses. Farmers were permitted to withdraw ₹25,000 per week against crop loans.[47][54]

Ordinance and Acts

The Specified Bank Notes (Cessation of Liabilities) Ordinance, 2016 was issued on 28 December 2016, ending the liability of the government for the demonetised banknotes. The ordinance also imposed fines on people found carrying out transactions with them after 8 November 2016, or holding more than ten of them after 30 December 2016. It provided for the exchange of the banknotes after 30 December for people who had been outside India between 9 November and 30 December.[55][56] The Specified Bank Notes (Cessation of Liabilities) Act, 2017 was notified on 1 March 2017, replacing the ordinance.[57]

Objectives and outcomes

The government said that the main objective of the exercise was curbing black money, which included income which had not been reported and thus was untaxed; money gained through corruption, illegal goods sales and illegal activities such as human trafficking; and counterfeit currency. Other stated objectives included expanding the tax base and increasing the number of taxpayers; reducing the number of transactions carried out by cash; reducing the finances available to terrorists and radical groups such as the Naxalite Maoists; and integrating the formal and informal economies.[58][59][60][61][62]

Shifting of goalposts

The government was described as 'shifting the goalposts'[63][64][65] with respect to the goals of the demonetisation exercise. The initial stated goal was to curb black money, corruption, and terrorism, but as it became apparent that almost all the cash was being exchanged,[66] the goals were expanded to include making India a cashless economy, neutralisation of money held by Maoists, terrorists and human traffickers, among others.[67]

Black money

The government estimated that ₹5 trillion, or approximately 20%, of the demonetised banknotes would be permanently removed from circulation.[68] However, according to a 2018 report from the RBI, 99.3% of the demonetised banknotes, or ₹15.3 trillion of the ₹15.41 trillion that had been demonetised, were deposited with the banking system. The banknotes that were not deposited were worth ₹107.2 billion.[69] Commentators concluded that the government had failed in its aim of purging black money from the economy.[13]

Evasion

 
A jewellery store in a shopping mall with a notice "We accept ₹500 and ₹1,000 notes", even after they were no longer valid banknotes.

There were reports of people circumventing the restrictions imposed on exchange transactions by conducting multiple transactions at different bank branches, and by sending hired people, employees, and followers in groups to exchange large amounts of demonetised banknotes at banks.[70][71] In Gujarat, Delhi and many other major cities, sales of gold increased post-demonetisation, surging the price as much as 45,000 (US$560) from the ruling price of 31,900 (US$400) per 10 grams (0.35 oz).[72][73] The Enforcement Directorate raided several forex establishments making backdated entries.[74] Money laundering using backdated accounting was carried out by co-operative banks,[75] jewellers,[76] sellers of mobile phones,[77] and several other businesses.[78]

The cash deposited into hundis (cash collection boxes in temples and gurudwaras) are exempted from inquiry by the tax department; this is sometimes to launder money.[79][80] After the demonetisation, there was a spike in donations in the form of the demonetised banknotes in temples.[81][82][83][84] People booked large numbers of railway tickets to dispose of unaccounted cash. This came to the notice of the Indian Railways authorities, who imposed restrictions to check evasion.[85][86]

Counterfeit banknotes

Number of counterfeit banknotes detected in banks (April – March)[87]
Denomination 2015–16 2016–17 2017–18
₹1 2 3 4
₹2 and ₹5 2 80 1
₹10 134 523 287
₹20 96 324 437
₹50 6,453 9,222 23,447
₹100 221,447 177,195 239,182
₹200 NA NA 79
₹500 (old) 261,695 317,567 127,918
₹500 (new) NA 199 9,892
₹1000 143,099 256,324 103,611
₹2000 NA 638 17,929
Total 632,926 762,027 522,783

After demonetisation, there was an increase in the number of counterfeit ₹100 and ₹50 banknotes. The number of counterfeit ₹500 and ₹1,000 (demonetised version) banknotes saw an increase in 2016–17 and subsequently a decline in 2017–18. But in 2017–18, there was an increase in counterfeit ₹500 and ₹2,000 (new version) banknotes than the previous year.[87] There has been no significant change in the number of counterfeit banknotes detected. In 2017–18, the number of detected counterfeit banknotes was close to the number before demonetisation.[88] Additionally, after demonetisation, only 0.0035% of the ₹1,000 banknotes were found to be counterfeit.[89]

Tax collection

Tax-to-GDP ratio (%)[88]

The number of income tax returns filing increased from 43.3 million to 52.9 million between the financial year of 2016 and 2017, which was not a significant increase compared to the increase between 2015 and 2016. The tax compliance had increased with a number of income tax returns filing increased but the majority of them were from salaried and non-business class. The income tax collections increased in the financial year of 2017 due to Income Disclosure Scheme 2016. If adjusted for it, the increase in tax collection was modest. The tax-to-GDP ratio has increased due to expanding tax base.[90][88] An analysis of the economic data shows that there has been no substantial increase in the number of new tax payers or direct tax collection due to demonetisation.[91][90][92] Indirect tax/GDP ratio also remained on the trend path and had no visible impact.[35]

The use of demonetised banknotes was allowed for the payment of municipal and local civic body taxes, leading to a jump in their revenue collections. For example, the Greater Hyderabad Municipal Corporation reported collecting about ₹1.6 billion in cash payments of outstanding and advance taxes within the first four days of demonetisation.[93]

Digital payments

The push for digital payments was one of the stated intentions of demonetisation.[94][95][96][97] There was an immediate and sharp jump in digital payments in November–December 2016 owing to shortages of cash. The debit card point of sales transactions was twice the size of value suggested by trends before demonetisation. The value of credit cards increased but no sharp growth was seen. The mobile wallet transactions picked up immediately after demonetisation, followed by a dip in mid-2017 due to easing cash shortages. There was again sharp rise thereafter. By April 2018, the volume of the digital payments had doubled.[94] After return of the cash, the growth in digital payment had been modest.[88][94]

The currency-to-GDP ratio was 12.1% in 2015–16. It declined to 8.8% in 2016–17 due to demonetisation but increased again to 10.9% in 2017–18.[87] The currency-to-GDP ratio was only marginally lower compared to levels before demonetisation.[88]

Banknotes in circulation

Cash in circulation[98]

On 28 October 2016, the total banknotes in circulation in India were valued at ₹17.77 trillion; what proportion of this derived from ₹500 and ₹1,000 banknotes was unknown. In its annual report of March 2016, the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) stated that total banknotes in circulation valued ₹16.42 trillion, of which nearly 86% (around ₹14.18 trillion) derived from ₹500 and ₹1,000 banknotes. In terms of volume, the report stated that 24% (around 22.03 billion) of the total 90.26 billion (9026.6 crore) banknotes in circulation were ₹500 and ₹1,000 banknotes.[99]

Before demonetisation (November 2016), there were banknotes worth ₹17.97 trillion in the market. The demonetised banknotes constituted 86.4% of it.[69] The banknotes in circulation had reached to the level before demonetisation in March 2018.[88] By March 2018, there were banknotes worth ₹18.03 trillion in the market; an increase of 9.9%. New banknotes of ₹2,000 and ₹500 constitute 80.6% of it. Thus, small domination banknotes increased by only 5.8%.[69] The volume of banknotes in the market increased by 2.1%.[87] The banknotes in circulation had further increased to ₹19.5 trillion in September 2018[100] and ₹21.41 trillion in March 2019, 19.14% higher than the level before demonetisation.[101] Five years after demonetisation, the currency in circulation was at a record high of ₹29.17 trillion on 29 October 2021.[102][103]

Terrorism and internal security

Initially following demonetization, activities and attacks by the Maoist Naxalite radical groups decreased, which was attributed to lack of finance following demonetisation. The surrender rate had reached its highest.[104][105][106][107][108] The activities returned within few months.[109][110] There was a decrease in the terror activities in Jammu and Kashmir.[111][112]

Other effects

 
Cashless ATM as on 1 December

Shortage of cash

 
Queue at an ATM for 100 banknotes in Howrah, on 8 November 2016, 22:23 (IST)

The scarcity of cash due to demonetisation led to chaos, and people faced difficulties in depositing or exchanging the demonetised banknotes due to long queues outside banks and ATMs across India.[8][9][113][114] The ATMs were short of cash for months after demonetisation.[115][116][117][118]

During the demonetisation, police and tax officials across India seized ₹6.1 billion in unaccounted money, including ₹1.1 billion in new banknotes.[119] Reports in the media noted that although the general public faced a severe cash shortage, some individuals were able to amass tens of millions of rupees in new banknotes; they thus described the demonetisation exercise as being futile.[120][121][122]

Transport

The All India Motor Transport Congress claimed that about 800,000 truck drivers and conductors were affected with the shortage of cash, with around 400,000 trucks stranded on major highways across India.[123] Major toll plazas in Gujarat and on the Delhi-Mumbai highways also saw long queues as toll plaza operators refused the demonetised banknotes.[124] The Ministry of Road Transport and Highways subsequently announced a suspension of toll collections on all national highways across the country until 2 December as well as acceptance of demonetised ₹500 banknotes as a toll from 2 to 15 December.[125]

Stock market

As a combined effect of demonetisation and the US presidential election, the stock market indices dropped to an around six-month low in the week following the announcement. The day after the demonetisation announcement, BSE SENSEX crashed nearly 1,689 points and NIFTY 50 plunged by over 541 points.[15] By the end of the intraday trading section on 15 November 2016, the BSE SENSEX index was lower by 565 points and the NIFTY 50 index was below 8100 intraday.[126] There were marginal effects on the stock market during November–December 2016.[127] A data study (July 2016 – February 2017) of 54 companies across 13 sectors listed with the NSE showed that companies in cement, cotton and rubber sectors showed an increase in total trades while companies in automotive, clothing, foods, paper, real estate, retail, steel, sugar, tea and textiles sectors showed a decrease in total trades after demonetisation.[128] Demonetisation had a negative impact on stock market returns evidenced from NIFTY 50 and other NIFTY sectoral indices.[129]

Industrial output

There was a reduction in industrial output as industries were hit by the cash shortage.[130] The Purchasing Managers' Index (PMI) fell to 46.7 in November 2016 from 54.5 in October 2016, recording its sharpest reduction in three years.[131] A reading above 50 indicates growth and a reading below shows contraction. This indicates a slowdown in both manufacturing and services industries.[132] The PMI report also showed that the reduction in inflation in November 2016 was due to a shortage in money supply.[131]

The growth in eight core sectors such as cement, steel and refinery products, which constitute 38% of the Index of industrial production (IIP), was only to 4.9 percent in November 2016, as compared with 6.6 percent a month prior.[132][133]

Agriculture

Demonetisation adversely affected transactions in the agriculture sector, which are heavily dependent on cash.[134] Due to scarcity of the new banknotes, many farmers had insufficient cash to purchase seeds, fertilisers and pesticides needed for the plantation of rabi crops usually sown around mid-November.[135] Farmers and their unions conducted protest rallies in Gujarat, Amritsar and Muzaffarnagar against the demonetisation as well as against restrictions imposed by the Reserve Bank of India on district cooperative central banks which were ordered not to accept or exchange the demonetised banknotes.[136][137][138][139]

The shortage of cash led to plunge in demand which in turn led to a crash in the prices of crops. Farmers were unable to recover even the costs of transportation from their fields to the market from the low prices offered.[140][141] Some farmers dumped their produce in protest against the government.[142][143]

Demonetisation resulted in the relative erosion of agricultural wages and weak bargaining power of farmers for their produce.[144]

Real GDP growth rate

Real GDP growth rate – Quarterly (%)[145][146][147][148]
Real GDP growth rate – Year-on-Year (%)[149]
Real GDP growth rate[145][146][147][148] (base year 2011–12)
Financial Year Quarter Quarterly Yearly
2015–16 Q1 (April–June) 7% 8%[149]
Q2 (July–September) 7.4%
Q3 (October–December) 7.2%
Q4 (January–March) 9.1%
2016–17 Q1 (April–June) 7.9% 7.1%[149]
Q2 (July–September) 7.5%
Q3 (October–December) 7%
Q4 (January–March) 6.1%
2017–18 Q1 (April–June) 5.7% 6.5%
Q2 (July–September) 6.3%
Q3 (October–December) 7.2%
Q4 (January–March) 7.6%
2018–19 Q1 (April–June) 7.7%
Q2 (July–September) 8.2%
Q3 (October–December)
Q4 (January–March)


Global analysts cut their forecasts of India's real GDP growth rate for the financial year 2016–17 by 0.5 to 3% due to demonetisation.[150][151] India's GDP in 2016 is estimated to be US$2.25 trillion, hence, each 1 per cent reduction in growth rate represents a shortfall of US$22.5 billion (₹1.54 trillion) for the Indian economy.[152] According to Societe Generale, quarterly GDP growth rates would drop below 7% for an entire year at a stretch for the first time since June 2011.[153]

The Q4'16–17 rate was 6.1% as against a forecast of 7.1% by economists.[154] The rate for the financial year 2016–17 was 7.1%, a reduction from the 8% in 2015–16.[155] This drop was attributed to demonetisation by economists.[156]

The GDP growth rate for Q1'17–18 dropped to 5.7%, compared to 7.9% a year prior,[157] the lowest since March 2014. This drop was attributed to demonetisation as well as inventory drawdown by companies due to the forthcoming implementation of the Goods and Service Tax.[158][145] The GDP started to recover from 2017–18 and clocked 8.2% growth in 2018–19.[146][148][159] The Hindustan Times in November 2021 reviewed GDP trends in the years following the demonitisation, and concluded that due to unpredented GDP contraction amid the COVID-19 pandemic and strong base effects, “the waters are now far too muddied to make any scientific assessment about demonetisation’s impact” on GDP.[160]

Employment

Employed workforce[161][162]
Monthly unemployment rate[163][164]

Demonetisation caused a loss of jobs and a decline in wages, particularly in the unorganised and informal sector and as well as in small enterprises.[165][166][167][168] Migrant workers were adversely affected by demonetisation.[169][170]

According to the report prepared by the Centre for Monitoring Indian Economy (CMIE), the number of employed people was 401 million in January–April 2016, 403 million during May–August 2016, and 406.5 million in September–December 2016. After demonetisation in November 2016, the number fell to 405 million in January–April 2017. So there was fall of 1.5 million in number of people employed.[162] CMIE also reported that the number of persons employed was 406.7 million in 2016–17 which fell by 0.1% to 406.2 million in 2017–18. So the employment had stagnated which resulted in employment rate decline. The employment rate fell from 42.59% in 2016–17 to 41.45% in 2016–17. The unemployment rate also declined from 7.51% in 2016–17 to 4.66% in 2017–18 because of the shrinking employed force. The number of the employed force fell from 439.7 million in 2016–17 to 426.1 million in 2017–18. CMIE attributed the impact to demonetisation as well as implementation of Goods and Services Tax in July 2017.[161][163]

It is estimated that 1.5 million jobs were lost, according to The Guardian.[17]

Cost to banks

Before demonetisation, the RBI had spent ₹34.21 billion to print banknotes in 2015–2016 (July to June). The cost of printing new banknotes rose to ₹79.65 billion in 2016–17 and ₹49.12 billion in 2017–18.[69] This resulted in a decline in the dividend paid to the government from ₹658.76 billion in 2015–16 to ₹306.59 billion in 2016–17 and ₹500 billion in 2017–18.[69][171][172] It was estimated that this decrease in income for the government could cause the fiscal deficit for the financial year 2016–17 to increase from the targeted 3.2% to 3.4%.[173] The Indian Air Force was paid ₹294.1 million to move banknotes after demonetisation.[174]

The banks incurred the cost in collection, storage, and movement of banknotes across the country, as well as the cost of re-calibrating ATMs for the new banknotes (as they differed in size from the old ones).[175]

Welfare schemes

Demonetisation negatively impacted the Midday Meal Scheme due to the shortage of funds.[176][177][178][179]

Deaths

Several people were reported to have died from standing in queues for hours to exchange their demonetised banknotes.[180][181][182][183][184][185] Deaths were also attributed to lack of medical help due to refusal of demonetised banknotes by hospitals.[186][187][188] In one month after the demonetisation was announced, 82 people died according to a detailed list compiled by Catch News.[189] By the end of December 2016, political opposition leaders claimed that over 100 people had died due to demonetisation.[190][191][192] In March 2017, the government stated that they received no official report on deaths connected to demonetisation.[193] Later in December 2018, the then Finance Minister Arun Jaitley reported in parliament that four people, three bank personnel and one customer of the State Bank of India, died during demonetisation.[194]

Legal issues

M. Seeni Ahamed, General Secretary of the Indian National League, filed a public interest litigation (PIL) to scrap the decision of demonetisation. The High Court dismissed the PIL, stating that it could not interfere in monetary policies of the government.[195] Similar PILs were also filed in the Supreme Court of India.[196] In November 2017, the Supreme Court of India referred all cases which have similarity to demonetisation to constitutional bench to review the legality of the demonetisation, implementation irregularities and violation of people's rights by limits on cash withdrawals.[197]

The government had initially announced that any person who was unable to deposit the demonetised banknotes by 31 December 2016 would be given an opportunity to do so until a later date.[1] However, the government allowed only Non-Resident Indians (NRIs) to deposit demonetised banknotes after 31 December 2016.[198] As a result, many people were left stranded with demonetised banknotes. People petitioned the courts to allow a deposit of the demonetised banknotes.[199] In November 2017, the Supreme Court dismissed 14 petitions related to demonetisation, and asked petitioners to file pleas with a constitutional bench which would deal with cases related to demonetisation.[200]

In January 2023, the Indian Supreme Court said in a majority judgement that demonetisation could not be struck down "on the grounds of proportionality or the process followed".[201]

On 2 January 2023, justice BV Nagarathna said in her dissent that the government notification on demonetisation was "unlawful" and the process of banning all currency notes of ₹ 1,000 and ₹ 500 could not have been initiated by the Indian government. Justice Nagarathna expressed her dissenting views after a Supreme Court Constitution bench, with 4:1 majority, upheld the demonetisation decision by the Narendra Modi government.[202]

Reactions

Reactions of economists

Most economists across the ideological spectrum, except those considered partisan, were broadly critical of the demonetisation as an economic policy.[203]

Columbia University economist Jagdish Bhagwati praised the demonetisation, calling it “a courageous and substantive economic reform that, despite the significant transition costs, has the potential to generate large future benefits.”[204] Nobel laureate Amartya Sen, on the other hand, called the demonitisation a "despotic action" and said that it "undermines notes, it undermines bank accounts, it undermines the entire economy of trust."[205][206][207] Former senior vice-president and chief economist of the World Bank Kaushik Basu, called it a "major mistake" and said that the "damage" is likely to be much greater than any possible benefits.[208][209][210] Pronab Sen, former Chief Statistician and Planning Commission of India member, called it a "hollow move" since it did not really address any of the purported goals of tackling black money or fake currency.[211] Prabhat Patnaik, a former professor of economics at the Jawaharlal Nehru University, Delhi called the move 'witless' and 'anti-people'. He criticised the assumption that black money was "a hoard of cash", saying that it would have little effect in eliminating "black activities" and would "caus[e] much hardship to common people."[212]

Nobel laureate Richard Thaler praised the demonetisation as "a policy I have long supported", but didn't seem positive towards the introduction of Rs.2000 banknote.[213] Economist and journalist T. N. Ninan wrote in the Business Standard that demonetisation 'looks like a bad idea, badly executed on the basis of some half-baked notions'.[214] Steve Forbes described the move as "sickening and immoral."[215] Forbes wrote that "[w]hat India has done is commit a massive theft of people's property without even the pretense of due process—a shocking move for a democratically elected government."[215] Nobel laureate Paul Krugman opined that it was difficult to see gains from demonetisation, while there might be significant costs to it.[216] Economic analyst Vivek Kaul stated in a BBC article that "demonetisation had been a failure of epic proportions."[14]

Reactions of industrialists

The decision met with mixed initial reactions. Several bankers like Arundhati Bhattacharya (Former Chairperson of State Bank of India) and Chanda Kochhar (MD & CEO of ICICI Bank) favored the demonitisation in order to curb black money.[217] Businessmen Anand Mahindra (Mahindra Group), Sajjan Jindal (JSW Group), Kunal Bahl (Snapdeal and FreeCharge) also supported the move, adding that it would also accelerate e-commerce.[217] Infosys founder N. R. Narayana Murthy praised the move.[218][219]

Deepak Parekh (Chairman of HDFC) had initially appreciated the decision of demonetisation, but later said that the move had derailed the economy, and expressed skepticism about its outcome.[220][221] Industrialist Rajiv Bajaj criticised demonetisation, saying that not just the execution, but the concept of demonetisation was wrong in itself.[222]

Political reactions

Indian National Congress spokesperson Randeep Surjewala welcomed the move but remained skeptical on the consequences that would follow.[223] Chief Minister of Bihar Nitish Kumar supported the move.[224][225][226] The demonetisation also got support from the then Chief Minister of Andhra Pradesh Nara Chandrababu Naidu.[227][228][229] Former Chief Election Commissioner of India S. Y. Quraishi said demonetisation could lead to long term electoral reforms.[230] Indian social activist Anna Hazare hailed demonetisation as a "revolutionary step".[231][232][233] Former President of India Pranab Mukherjee welcomed the demonetisation move by calling it a "bold step".[234][235][236][237] Chief Ministers of several Indian states like Mamata Banerjee,[238] Arvind Kejriwal[239] and Pinarayi Vijayan[240] have criticised and led major protests against the decision in their states and in parliament. Initially, the move to demonetise and try to hinder black money was appreciated, but the manner in which it was carried out by causing hardships to common people was criticised.[241]

A Parliamentary panel report in April 2017 stated that rural households and "honest taxpayers" were the worst hit by demonetisation.[242] It said that it was not just the poor that suffered, but the manufacturing sector was impacted too.[243] According to the panel, demonetisation created significant disruption throughout economy, because it was carried out without prior study or research.[244][245] An Indian National Congress led opposition which includes 13 political parties, opposed the government on the issue of demonetisation in the Winter Session of the Indian Parliament.[246][247][248][249]

On 16 November 2016, Mamata Banerjee led a delegation comprising political parties of Trinamool Congress, Aam Aadmi Party, BJP ally Shiv Sena and National Conference to Rashtrapati Bhawan to protest against the demonetisation. A memorandum was submitted to the President of India Pranab Mukherjee demanding rollback of the decision.[250][11]

Prem Chand Gupta, a member of the Rashtriya Janata Dal, questioned a statement of Modi from the unscheduled TV broadcast on 8 November, "If it was planned 10 months ago, how did RBI Governor Urjit Patel sign on new note?". Praful Patel, a member of the Nationalist Congress Party, stated that "the government was not even prepared to recalibrate the ATMs while announcing the move. People's suffering are unimaginable. Nobody is questioning the government's intention, but you are unprepared to execute the move". Later, the former Chief Minister of Uttar Pradesh Mayawati called the situation "a financial emergency", saying, "It looks as if Bharat has shut down." Also, Sitaram Yechury from the Communist Party of India, questioned the government on the demonetisation move by stating "only 6% of black money in India is in cash to drive his point that demonetisation won't curb illicit wealth."[251]

On 17 November 2016, Chief Minister of Delhi Arvind Kejriwal and his West Bengal counterpart Mamata Banerjee led a rally against demonetisation at Azadpur Mandi, the biggest vegetable and fruits wholesale market in New Delhi.[252]

On 24 November 2016, former prime minister Manmohan Singh said "this scheme will hurt small industries, the farming sector. The GDP can decline by about 3 percent due to this move". He called the demonetisation an "organised loot, legalised plunder of the common people".[253][254]

Strikes were organised across India. Opposition parties like the Indian National Congress, Bahujan Samaj Party, Trinamool Congress,[255] DMK, JD(U), AIADMK, Nationalist Congress Party, Left, Rashtriya Janata Dal and the Samajwadi Party[256] decided to observe 'Akrosh Diwas' as, a protest campaign day on 28 November [257][258] and launch protests in front of banks, demanding that money be returned to people.[259] In the state of Bihar, 15 trains were blocked and stranded, while the states of West Bengal, Maharashtra and Uttar Pradesh saw protest marches and rallies led by opposition parties.[260] In the state of Kerala, shops and business establishments were shut, with schools and colleges closed throughout the state, while movements of private vehicles were also disrupted in Northern Kerala.[260]

Former Indian Chief Election Commissioner, O. P. Rawat stated that 'the note ban had absolutely no impact on black money', and that record amounts of money had been seized in polls held after demonetisation.[261]

International reactions

By and large, initial international response was positive which saw the move as a bold crackdown on corruption.[262][263][264] The International Monetary Fund's spokesperson Gerry Rice told that it supported the efforts to fight corruption and illegal finances but cautioned about the disruptions.[262]

Chinese state media Global Times praised the move as a "fierce fight against black money and corruption."[263] Former Prime Minister of Finland and vice-president of European Commission Jyrki Katainen welcomed the demonetisation move stressing that bringing transparency will strengthen the Indian economy.[265][266] BBC's South Asia Correspondent Justin Rowlatt in his article praised the move for its secrecy.[267] Tim Worstall wrote in Forbes that demonetisation was having positive macroeconomic effects.[268] Swedish Minister of Enterprise Mikael Damberg supported the move by calling it a bold decision.[264]

The demonetisation also came in for sharp criticism from media outside India,[269][270] with The New York Times saying that the demonetisation was "atrociously planned" and that it did not appear to have combatted black money,[271][272] while an article in The Guardian stated that "Modi has brought havoc to India".[269] The Harvard Business Review called it "a case study in poor policy and even poorer execution".[273] The frequent change in the narrative on objectives of the demonetisation to its visible impact on the poorest of the poor made other critiques calling the government's narrative as spins in view of the "pointless suffering on India's poorest."[274]

Political impact

Akshay Mangala, an assistant professor at Harvard Business School, called the move "the politics of visible disruption". He noted that the people might attribute the implementation shortcomings to institutional weakness while the government could take credit for its attempt to curb the black money. He also noted that it may result in the public opinion in favour of the government which is led by the BJP if the opposition parties, led by the INC, fail to form the countervailing narrative.[275] Massachusetts Institute of Technology associated academics Abhijit Banerjee and Namrata Kala also opined the same.[203]

The BJP and its allies formed the government in six out of seven state legislative assemblies which went to the elections in 2017, including the most populous state, Uttar Pradesh.[203][276][277][278] BJP improved its performance in Uttarakhand[276][278][279] and Himachal Pradesh.[280][281] In Manipur and Goa, INC secured the plurality while BJP came second and formed the government with the help of its allies.[278][282] In Gujarat, BJP worsened its performance but retained the majority.[283][280] The BJP and its allies lost to the INC in Punjab.[278]

Long term impact

In 2019, India experienced an economic slowdown which was attributed to demonetisation and several other factors.[284][285]

In 2020, a large number of users switched to digital payments with ease following the increase in COVID-19 pandemic in India. The rise in digital payments and cashless transactions was attributed to the demonetisation. Although with the new data released by RBI in Nov 2021, it is evident that cash circulation in India has actually increased by multi fold since demonetization and demonetization has not necessarily transferred cash users to digital users.[286]

As of November 2021, further increase in digital payments and bank notes in circulation was seen.[287]

In popular culture

See also

References

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External links

  • What the FAQ just happened! All your questions about Rs 500–1000 notes answered, India Today, 8 November 2016
  • FAQ answers and Guidelines on Reserve Bank of India
  • Ministry of Finance, Government of India
  • Litvack, L., & Vigne, S. (2017). Demonetisation in India and Emerging Challenges: A Report Delivered to the Department for the Economy, Northern Ireland and the Government of India by Queen's University Belfast and O.P. Jindal Global University. Belfast: Queen's University Belfast. http://pure.qub.ac.uk/portal/files/131517443/Final_report.pdf

2016, indian, banknote, demonetisation, november, 2016, government, india, announced, demonetisation, banknotes, mahatma, gandhi, series, also, announced, issuance, banknotes, exchange, demonetised, banknotes, prime, minister, narendra, modi, claimed, that, ac. On 8 November 2016 the Government of India announced the demonetisation of all 500 and 1 000 banknotes of the Mahatma Gandhi Series It also announced the issuance of new 500 and 2 000 banknotes in exchange for the demonetised banknotes 1 Prime Minister Narendra Modi claimed that the action would curtail the shadow economy increase cashless transactions and reduce the use of illicit and counterfeit cash to fund illegal activity and terrorism 2 3 4 2016 Indian banknote demonetisationQueues outside a bank to exchange demonetised banknotes in Kolkata on 10 November 2016Date8 November 2016 6 years ago 2016 11 08 Time20 15 IST 14 45 UTC LocationIndiaMotiveCurbing black moneyThe announcement of demonetisation was followed by prolonged cash shortages in the weeks that followed which created significant disruption throughout the economy 5 6 7 8 9 10 People seeking to exchange their banknotes had to stand in lengthy queues and several deaths were linked to the rush to exchange cash 11 12 According to a 2018 report from the Reserve Bank of India 15 3 trillion of the 15 41 trillion in demonetised bank notes or approximately 99 3 were deposited in banks leading analysts to state that the effort had failed to remove black money from the economy 13 14 The BSE SENSEX and NIFTY 50 stock indices fell over 6 percent on the day after the announcement 15 The move reduced the country s industrial production and its GDP growth rate 16 It is estimated that 1 5 million jobs were lost 17 The move also saw a significant increase in digital and cashless transactions throughout the country 18 Initially the move received support from some central bankers as well as from some international commentators The move was also criticised as poorly planned and unfair and was met with protests litigation and strikes against the government in several places across India Debates also took place concerning the move in both houses of Parliament 19 20 21 22 Contents 1 Background 2 Demonetisation process 2 1 Preparation and announcement 2 2 Information leak rumours 2 3 Cash exchange and withdrawal 2 4 Ordinance and Acts 3 Objectives and outcomes 3 1 Shifting of goalposts 3 2 Black money 3 2 1 Evasion 3 3 Counterfeit banknotes 3 4 Tax collection 3 5 Digital payments 3 6 Banknotes in circulation 3 7 Terrorism and internal security 4 Other effects 4 1 Shortage of cash 4 2 Transport 4 3 Stock market 4 4 Industrial output 4 5 Agriculture 4 6 Real GDP growth rate 4 7 Employment 4 8 Cost to banks 4 9 Welfare schemes 4 10 Deaths 5 Legal issues 6 Reactions 6 1 Reactions of economists 6 2 Reactions of industrialists 6 3 Political reactions 6 4 International reactions 7 Political impact 8 Long term impact 9 In popular culture 10 See also 11 References 12 External linksBackground EditThe Indian government had demonetised banknotes on two prior occasions once in 1946 and once in 1978 and in both cases the goal was to combat tax evasion via black money held outside the formal economic system 23 In 1978 the Janata Party coalition government demonetised banknotes of 1 000 5 000 and 10 000 again in the hopes of curbing counterfeit money and black money 24 In 2012 the Central Board of Direct Taxes recommended against demonetisation saying in a report that demonetisation may not be a solution for tackling black money or shadow economy which is largely held in the form of benami properties bullion and jewelry 25 26 According to data from income tax probes black money holders kept only 6 or less of their wealth as cash suggesting that targeting this cash would not be a successful strategy 27 Demonetisation process Edit Demonetised 500 and 1 000 banknotes of the Mahatma Gandhi Series Preparation and announcement Edit The plan to demonetise the 500 and 1 000 banknotes was initiated between six and ten months before it was a report by the State Bank of India SBI analysed possible strategies and effects of demonetisation 28 In May 2016 the Reserve Bank of India had started preparing for new banknotes and confirmed the design of 2 000 banknotes in August 2016 The printing of new banknotes started in October when the news stories of forthcoming new banknotes appeared in the media 29 30 31 On 27 October 2016 the Hindi daily Dainik Jagran published a report quoting RBI sources speaking of the forthcoming of 2 000 banknotes alongside withdrawal of 500 and 1 000 banknotes 32 33 On 21 October 2016 The Hindu Business Line had also published a report on the forthcoming 2 000 banknote 34 The Board of the Reserve Bank of India met on Nov 8th 2016 5 30 PM to consider a letter from the Ministry of Finance regarding demonetization Two key reasons for the proposal cited in the government letter were 1 between 2011 and 2016 the supply of 500 and 1 000 rupee bills had grown by 76 and 108 percent respectively while India s economy had only grown by 30 percent during this period and 2 cash typically facilitated black money The board was further told that the measure was also intended to encourage greater financial inclusion and to incentivize greater digitization of the economy The board approved the proposal but not before making a few trenchant comments It noted that the measure may not have the desired effect on black money because most people do not hold undeclared wealth in cash It further worried about the negative effects on growth that were likely to occur in the short run Possibly the most damning observation was that the primary fact on which the government had based its proposal that the supply of 500 and 1 000 rupee bills had far outstripped the growth rate of the economy was simply wrong The board pointed out the embarrassing fact that the government had compared GDP growth in real terms with the growth of currency supply in nominal terms In fact nominal GDP growth had summed to over 80 percent between 2011 and 2016 and hence was in line with the growth of the currency bills to be demonetized 35 36 37 The Union cabinet was apprised of the plan on 8 November 2016 in a meeting in the evening convened by Prime Minister Modi 38 Soon after the meeting Modi announced the demonetisation in an unscheduled live national televised address at 20 15 IST 39 40 He declared circulation of all 500 and 1 000 banknotes of the Mahatma Gandhi Series as invalid effective from the midnight of the same day and announced the issuance of new 500 and 2 000 banknotes of the Mahatma Gandhi New Series in exchange for the demonetised banknotes 41 Information leak rumours Edit In an interview of prominent businessmen allegedly claimed after the announcement of demonetisation that they had received prior tip offs and rumours warning of the move and after seeing leaked photos of new 2 000 notes knew what was coming allowing them to preserve their money by converting it into smaller denominations 42 A BJP MLA from Rajasthan Bhawani Singh Rajawat casually claimed in a video that wealthy businessmen were informed about the demonetisation before it occurred He later denied making the comments 43 44 Cash exchange and withdrawal Edit People gathered at ATM of Axis Bank on 16 November 2016 in Mehsana Gujarat to withdraw cash following deposit of demonetised banknotes in bank The Reserve Bank of India stipulated that the demonetised banknotes could be deposited with banks over a period of fifty days until 30 December 2016 The banknotes could also be exchanged for legal tender over the counter at all banks The limit for such exchange was 4 000 per person from 8 to 13 November was increased to 4 500 from 14 to 17 November and reduced to 2 000 from 18 to 25 November 1 45 46 47 The exchange of banknotes was stopped completely on 25 November although the government had previously stated that the volume of exchange would be increased after that date 48 International airports also facilitated an exchange of banknotes for foreign tourists and out bound travellers amounting to a total value of 5 000 per person 49 Fuel pumps government hospitals railway and airline booking counters state government recognised dairies and ration stores and crematoriums were allowed to accept the demonetised banknotes until 2 December 2016 50 Cash withdrawals from bank accounts were restricted to 10 000 per day and 20 000 per week per account from 10 to 13 November 1 This limit was increased to 24 000 per week from 14 November 2016 45 46 Limits on cash withdrawals from Current accounts Cash credit accounts Overdraft accounts were withdrawn later RBI increased the withdrawal limit from Savings Bank account to 50 000 from the earlier 24 000 on 20 February 2017 and then on 13 March 2017 it removed all withdrawal limits from savings bank accounts 51 A daily limit on withdrawals from ATMs was also imposed varying from 2 000 per day until 14 November 52 and 2 500 per day until 31 December 45 46 This limit was increased to 4 500 per day from 1 January 53 and again to 10 000 from 16 January 2017 51 From 17 November families were allowed to withdraw 250 000 for wedding expenses Farmers were permitted to withdraw 25 000 per week against crop loans 47 54 Ordinance and Acts Edit The Specified Bank Notes Cessation of Liabilities Ordinance 2016 was issued on 28 December 2016 ending the liability of the government for the demonetised banknotes The ordinance also imposed fines on people found carrying out transactions with them after 8 November 2016 or holding more than ten of them after 30 December 2016 It provided for the exchange of the banknotes after 30 December for people who had been outside India between 9 November and 30 December 55 56 The Specified Bank Notes Cessation of Liabilities Act 2017 was notified on 1 March 2017 replacing the ordinance 57 Objectives and outcomes EditThe government said that the main objective of the exercise was curbing black money which included income which had not been reported and thus was untaxed money gained through corruption illegal goods sales and illegal activities such as human trafficking and counterfeit currency Other stated objectives included expanding the tax base and increasing the number of taxpayers reducing the number of transactions carried out by cash reducing the finances available to terrorists and radical groups such as the Naxalite Maoists and integrating the formal and informal economies 58 59 60 61 62 Shifting of goalposts Edit The government was described as shifting the goalposts 63 64 65 with respect to the goals of the demonetisation exercise The initial stated goal was to curb black money corruption and terrorism but as it became apparent that almost all the cash was being exchanged 66 the goals were expanded to include making India a cashless economy neutralisation of money held by Maoists terrorists and human traffickers among others 67 Black money Edit The government estimated that 5 trillion or approximately 20 of the demonetised banknotes would be permanently removed from circulation 68 However according to a 2018 report from the RBI 99 3 of the demonetised banknotes or 15 3 trillion of the 15 41 trillion that had been demonetised were deposited with the banking system The banknotes that were not deposited were worth 107 2 billion 69 Commentators concluded that the government had failed in its aim of purging black money from the economy 13 Evasion Edit A jewellery store in a shopping mall with a notice We accept 500 and 1 000 notes even after they were no longer valid banknotes There were reports of people circumventing the restrictions imposed on exchange transactions by conducting multiple transactions at different bank branches and by sending hired people employees and followers in groups to exchange large amounts of demonetised banknotes at banks 70 71 In Gujarat Delhi and many other major cities sales of gold increased post demonetisation surging the price as much as 45 000 US 560 from the ruling price of 31 900 US 400 per 10 grams 0 35 oz 72 73 The Enforcement Directorate raided several forex establishments making backdated entries 74 Money laundering using backdated accounting was carried out by co operative banks 75 jewellers 76 sellers of mobile phones 77 and several other businesses 78 The cash deposited into hundis cash collection boxes in temples and gurudwaras are exempted from inquiry by the tax department this is sometimes to launder money 79 80 After the demonetisation there was a spike in donations in the form of the demonetised banknotes in temples 81 82 83 84 People booked large numbers of railway tickets to dispose of unaccounted cash This came to the notice of the Indian Railways authorities who imposed restrictions to check evasion 85 86 Counterfeit banknotes Edit Number of counterfeit banknotes detected in banks April March 87 Denomination 2015 16 2016 17 2017 18 1 2 3 4 2 and 5 2 80 1 10 134 523 287 20 96 324 437 50 6 453 9 222 23 447 100 221 447 177 195 239 182 200 NA NA 79 500 old 261 695 317 567 127 918 500 new NA 199 9 892 1000 143 099 256 324 103 611 2000 NA 638 17 929Total 632 926 762 027 522 783After demonetisation there was an increase in the number of counterfeit 100 and 50 banknotes The number of counterfeit 500 and 1 000 demonetised version banknotes saw an increase in 2016 17 and subsequently a decline in 2017 18 But in 2017 18 there was an increase in counterfeit 500 and 2 000 new version banknotes than the previous year 87 There has been no significant change in the number of counterfeit banknotes detected In 2017 18 the number of detected counterfeit banknotes was close to the number before demonetisation 88 Additionally after demonetisation only 0 0035 of the 1 000 banknotes were found to be counterfeit 89 Tax collection Edit Tax to GDP ratio 88 The number of income tax returns filing increased from 43 3 million to 52 9 million between the financial year of 2016 and 2017 which was not a significant increase compared to the increase between 2015 and 2016 The tax compliance had increased with a number of income tax returns filing increased but the majority of them were from salaried and non business class The income tax collections increased in the financial year of 2017 due to Income Disclosure Scheme 2016 If adjusted for it the increase in tax collection was modest The tax to GDP ratio has increased due to expanding tax base 90 88 An analysis of the economic data shows that there has been no substantial increase in the number of new tax payers or direct tax collection due to demonetisation 91 90 92 Indirect tax GDP ratio also remained on the trend path and had no visible impact 35 The use of demonetised banknotes was allowed for the payment of municipal and local civic body taxes leading to a jump in their revenue collections For example the Greater Hyderabad Municipal Corporation reported collecting about 1 6 billion in cash payments of outstanding and advance taxes within the first four days of demonetisation 93 Digital payments Edit The push for digital payments was one of the stated intentions of demonetisation 94 95 96 97 There was an immediate and sharp jump in digital payments in November December 2016 owing to shortages of cash The debit card point of sales transactions was twice the size of value suggested by trends before demonetisation The value of credit cards increased but no sharp growth was seen The mobile wallet transactions picked up immediately after demonetisation followed by a dip in mid 2017 due to easing cash shortages There was again sharp rise thereafter By April 2018 the volume of the digital payments had doubled 94 After return of the cash the growth in digital payment had been modest 88 94 The currency to GDP ratio was 12 1 in 2015 16 It declined to 8 8 in 2016 17 due to demonetisation but increased again to 10 9 in 2017 18 87 The currency to GDP ratio was only marginally lower compared to levels before demonetisation 88 Banknotes in circulation Edit Cash in circulation 98 On 28 October 2016 the total banknotes in circulation in India were valued at 17 77 trillion what proportion of this derived from 500 and 1 000 banknotes was unknown In its annual report of March 2016 the Reserve Bank of India RBI stated that total banknotes in circulation valued 16 42 trillion of which nearly 86 around 14 18 trillion derived from 500 and 1 000 banknotes In terms of volume the report stated that 24 around 22 03 billion of the total 90 26 billion 9026 6 crore banknotes in circulation were 500 and 1 000 banknotes 99 Before demonetisation November 2016 there were banknotes worth 17 97 trillion in the market The demonetised banknotes constituted 86 4 of it 69 The banknotes in circulation had reached to the level before demonetisation in March 2018 88 By March 2018 there were banknotes worth 18 03 trillion in the market an increase of 9 9 New banknotes of 2 000 and 500 constitute 80 6 of it Thus small domination banknotes increased by only 5 8 69 The volume of banknotes in the market increased by 2 1 87 The banknotes in circulation had further increased to 19 5 trillion in September 2018 100 and 21 41 trillion in March 2019 19 14 higher than the level before demonetisation 101 Five years after demonetisation the currency in circulation was at a record high of 29 17 trillion on 29 October 2021 102 103 Terrorism and internal security Edit Initially following demonetization activities and attacks by the Maoist Naxalite radical groups decreased which was attributed to lack of finance following demonetisation The surrender rate had reached its highest 104 105 106 107 108 The activities returned within few months 109 110 There was a decrease in the terror activities in Jammu and Kashmir 111 112 Other effects Edit Cashless ATM as on 1 December Shortage of cash Edit Queue at an ATM for 100 banknotes in Howrah on 8 November 2016 22 23 IST The scarcity of cash due to demonetisation led to chaos and people faced difficulties in depositing or exchanging the demonetised banknotes due to long queues outside banks and ATMs across India 8 9 113 114 The ATMs were short of cash for months after demonetisation 115 116 117 118 During the demonetisation police and tax officials across India seized 6 1 billion in unaccounted money including 1 1 billion in new banknotes 119 Reports in the media noted that although the general public faced a severe cash shortage some individuals were able to amass tens of millions of rupees in new banknotes they thus described the demonetisation exercise as being futile 120 121 122 Transport Edit The All India Motor Transport Congress claimed that about 800 000 truck drivers and conductors were affected with the shortage of cash with around 400 000 trucks stranded on major highways across India 123 Major toll plazas in Gujarat and on the Delhi Mumbai highways also saw long queues as toll plaza operators refused the demonetised banknotes 124 The Ministry of Road Transport and Highways subsequently announced a suspension of toll collections on all national highways across the country until 2 December as well as acceptance of demonetised 500 banknotes as a toll from 2 to 15 December 125 Stock market Edit As a combined effect of demonetisation and the US presidential election the stock market indices dropped to an around six month low in the week following the announcement The day after the demonetisation announcement BSE SENSEX crashed nearly 1 689 points and NIFTY 50 plunged by over 541 points 15 By the end of the intraday trading section on 15 November 2016 the BSE SENSEX index was lower by 565 points and the NIFTY 50 index was below 8100 intraday 126 There were marginal effects on the stock market during November December 2016 127 A data study July 2016 February 2017 of 54 companies across 13 sectors listed with the NSE showed that companies in cement cotton and rubber sectors showed an increase in total trades while companies in automotive clothing foods paper real estate retail steel sugar tea and textiles sectors showed a decrease in total trades after demonetisation 128 Demonetisation had a negative impact on stock market returns evidenced from NIFTY 50 and other NIFTY sectoral indices 129 Industrial output Edit There was a reduction in industrial output as industries were hit by the cash shortage 130 The Purchasing Managers Index PMI fell to 46 7 in November 2016 from 54 5 in October 2016 recording its sharpest reduction in three years 131 A reading above 50 indicates growth and a reading below shows contraction This indicates a slowdown in both manufacturing and services industries 132 The PMI report also showed that the reduction in inflation in November 2016 was due to a shortage in money supply 131 The growth in eight core sectors such as cement steel and refinery products which constitute 38 of the Index of industrial production IIP was only to 4 9 percent in November 2016 as compared with 6 6 percent a month prior 132 133 Agriculture Edit Demonetisation adversely affected transactions in the agriculture sector which are heavily dependent on cash 134 Due to scarcity of the new banknotes many farmers had insufficient cash to purchase seeds fertilisers and pesticides needed for the plantation of rabi crops usually sown around mid November 135 Farmers and their unions conducted protest rallies in Gujarat Amritsar and Muzaffarnagar against the demonetisation as well as against restrictions imposed by the Reserve Bank of India on district cooperative central banks which were ordered not to accept or exchange the demonetised banknotes 136 137 138 139 The shortage of cash led to plunge in demand which in turn led to a crash in the prices of crops Farmers were unable to recover even the costs of transportation from their fields to the market from the low prices offered 140 141 Some farmers dumped their produce in protest against the government 142 143 Demonetisation resulted in the relative erosion of agricultural wages and weak bargaining power of farmers for their produce 144 Real GDP growth rate Edit Real GDP growth rate Quarterly 145 146 147 148 Real GDP growth rate Year on Year 149 Real GDP growth rate 145 146 147 148 base year 2011 12 Financial Year Quarter Quarterly Yearly2015 16 Q1 April June 7 8 149 Q2 July September 7 4 Q3 October December 7 2 Q4 January March 9 1 2016 17 Q1 April June 7 9 7 1 149 Q2 July September 7 5 Q3 October December 7 Q4 January March 6 1 2017 18 Q1 April June 5 7 6 5 Q2 July September 6 3 Q3 October December 7 2 Q4 January March 7 6 2018 19 Q1 April June 7 7 Q2 July September 8 2 Q3 October December Q4 January March Global analysts cut their forecasts of India s real GDP growth rate for the financial year 2016 17 by 0 5 to 3 due to demonetisation 150 151 India s GDP in 2016 is estimated to be US 2 25 trillion hence each 1 per cent reduction in growth rate represents a shortfall of US 22 5 billion 1 54 trillion for the Indian economy 152 According to Societe Generale quarterly GDP growth rates would drop below 7 for an entire year at a stretch for the first time since June 2011 153 The Q4 16 17 rate was 6 1 as against a forecast of 7 1 by economists 154 The rate for the financial year 2016 17 was 7 1 a reduction from the 8 in 2015 16 155 This drop was attributed to demonetisation by economists 156 The GDP growth rate for Q1 17 18 dropped to 5 7 compared to 7 9 a year prior 157 the lowest since March 2014 This drop was attributed to demonetisation as well as inventory drawdown by companies due to the forthcoming implementation of the Goods and Service Tax 158 145 The GDP started to recover from 2017 18 and clocked 8 2 growth in 2018 19 146 148 159 The Hindustan Times in November 2021 reviewed GDP trends in the years following the demonitisation and concluded that due to unpredented GDP contraction amid the COVID 19 pandemic and strong base effects the waters are now far too muddied to make any scientific assessment about demonetisation s impact on GDP 160 Employment Edit Employed workforce 161 162 Monthly unemployment rate 163 164 Demonetisation caused a loss of jobs and a decline in wages particularly in the unorganised and informal sector and as well as in small enterprises 165 166 167 168 Migrant workers were adversely affected by demonetisation 169 170 According to the report prepared by the Centre for Monitoring Indian Economy CMIE the number of employed people was 401 million in January April 2016 403 million during May August 2016 and 406 5 million in September December 2016 After demonetisation in November 2016 the number fell to 405 million in January April 2017 So there was fall of 1 5 million in number of people employed 162 CMIE also reported that the number of persons employed was 406 7 million in 2016 17 which fell by 0 1 to 406 2 million in 2017 18 So the employment had stagnated which resulted in employment rate decline The employment rate fell from 42 59 in 2016 17 to 41 45 in 2016 17 The unemployment rate also declined from 7 51 in 2016 17 to 4 66 in 2017 18 because of the shrinking employed force The number of the employed force fell from 439 7 million in 2016 17 to 426 1 million in 2017 18 CMIE attributed the impact to demonetisation as well as implementation of Goods and Services Tax in July 2017 161 163 It is estimated that 1 5 million jobs were lost according to The Guardian 17 Cost to banks Edit Before demonetisation the RBI had spent 34 21 billion to print banknotes in 2015 2016 July to June The cost of printing new banknotes rose to 79 65 billion in 2016 17 and 49 12 billion in 2017 18 69 This resulted in a decline in the dividend paid to the government from 658 76 billion in 2015 16 to 306 59 billion in 2016 17 and 500 billion in 2017 18 69 171 172 It was estimated that this decrease in income for the government could cause the fiscal deficit for the financial year 2016 17 to increase from the targeted 3 2 to 3 4 173 The Indian Air Force was paid 294 1 million to move banknotes after demonetisation 174 The banks incurred the cost in collection storage and movement of banknotes across the country as well as the cost of re calibrating ATMs for the new banknotes as they differed in size from the old ones 175 Welfare schemes Edit Demonetisation negatively impacted the Midday Meal Scheme due to the shortage of funds 176 177 178 179 Deaths Edit Several people were reported to have died from standing in queues for hours to exchange their demonetised banknotes 180 181 182 183 184 185 Deaths were also attributed to lack of medical help due to refusal of demonetised banknotes by hospitals 186 187 188 In one month after the demonetisation was announced 82 people died according to a detailed list compiled by Catch News 189 By the end of December 2016 political opposition leaders claimed that over 100 people had died due to demonetisation 190 191 192 In March 2017 the government stated that they received no official report on deaths connected to demonetisation 193 Later in December 2018 the then Finance Minister Arun Jaitley reported in parliament that four people three bank personnel and one customer of the State Bank of India died during demonetisation 194 Legal issues EditM Seeni Ahamed General Secretary of the Indian National League filed a public interest litigation PIL to scrap the decision of demonetisation The High Court dismissed the PIL stating that it could not interfere in monetary policies of the government 195 Similar PILs were also filed in the Supreme Court of India 196 In November 2017 the Supreme Court of India referred all cases which have similarity to demonetisation to constitutional bench to review the legality of the demonetisation implementation irregularities and violation of people s rights by limits on cash withdrawals 197 The government had initially announced that any person who was unable to deposit the demonetised banknotes by 31 December 2016 would be given an opportunity to do so until a later date 1 However the government allowed only Non Resident Indians NRIs to deposit demonetised banknotes after 31 December 2016 198 As a result many people were left stranded with demonetised banknotes People petitioned the courts to allow a deposit of the demonetised banknotes 199 In November 2017 the Supreme Court dismissed 14 petitions related to demonetisation and asked petitioners to file pleas with a constitutional bench which would deal with cases related to demonetisation 200 In January 2023 the Indian Supreme Court said in a majority judgement that demonetisation could not be struck down on the grounds of proportionality or the process followed 201 On 2 January 2023 justice BV Nagarathna said in her dissent that the government notification on demonetisation was unlawful and the process of banning all currency notes of 1 000 and 500 could not have been initiated by the Indian government Justice Nagarathna expressed her dissenting views after a Supreme Court Constitution bench with 4 1 majority upheld the demonetisation decision by the Narendra Modi government 202 Reactions EditReactions of economists Edit Most economists across the ideological spectrum except those considered partisan were broadly critical of the demonetisation as an economic policy 203 Columbia University economist Jagdish Bhagwati praised the demonetisation calling it a courageous and substantive economic reform that despite the significant transition costs has the potential to generate large future benefits 204 Nobel laureate Amartya Sen on the other hand called the demonitisation a despotic action and said that it undermines notes it undermines bank accounts it undermines the entire economy of trust 205 206 207 Former senior vice president and chief economist of the World Bank Kaushik Basu called it a major mistake and said that the damage is likely to be much greater than any possible benefits 208 209 210 Pronab Sen former Chief Statistician and Planning Commission of India member called it a hollow move since it did not really address any of the purported goals of tackling black money or fake currency 211 Prabhat Patnaik a former professor of economics at the Jawaharlal Nehru University Delhi called the move witless and anti people He criticised the assumption that black money was a hoard of cash saying that it would have little effect in eliminating black activities and would caus e much hardship to common people 212 Nobel laureate Richard Thaler praised the demonetisation as a policy I have long supported but didn t seem positive towards the introduction of Rs 2000 banknote 213 Economist and journalist T N Ninan wrote in the Business Standard that demonetisation looks like a bad idea badly executed on the basis of some half baked notions 214 Steve Forbes described the move as sickening and immoral 215 Forbes wrote that w hat India has done is commit a massive theft of people s property without even the pretense of due process a shocking move for a democratically elected government 215 Nobel laureate Paul Krugman opined that it was difficult to see gains from demonetisation while there might be significant costs to it 216 Economic analyst Vivek Kaul stated in a BBC article that demonetisation had been a failure of epic proportions 14 Reactions of industrialists Edit The decision met with mixed initial reactions Several bankers like Arundhati Bhattacharya Former Chairperson of State Bank of India and Chanda Kochhar MD amp CEO of ICICI Bank favored the demonitisation in order to curb black money 217 Businessmen Anand Mahindra Mahindra Group Sajjan Jindal JSW Group Kunal Bahl Snapdeal and FreeCharge also supported the move adding that it would also accelerate e commerce 217 Infosys founder N R Narayana Murthy praised the move 218 219 Deepak Parekh Chairman of HDFC had initially appreciated the decision of demonetisation but later said that the move had derailed the economy and expressed skepticism about its outcome 220 221 Industrialist Rajiv Bajaj criticised demonetisation saying that not just the execution but the concept of demonetisation was wrong in itself 222 Political reactions Edit Indian National Congress spokesperson Randeep Surjewala welcomed the move but remained skeptical on the consequences that would follow 223 Chief Minister of Bihar Nitish Kumar supported the move 224 225 226 The demonetisation also got support from the then Chief Minister of Andhra Pradesh Nara Chandrababu Naidu 227 228 229 Former Chief Election Commissioner of India S Y Quraishi said demonetisation could lead to long term electoral reforms 230 Indian social activist Anna Hazare hailed demonetisation as a revolutionary step 231 232 233 Former President of India Pranab Mukherjee welcomed the demonetisation move by calling it a bold step 234 235 236 237 Chief Ministers of several Indian states like Mamata Banerjee 238 Arvind Kejriwal 239 and Pinarayi Vijayan 240 have criticised and led major protests against the decision in their states and in parliament Initially the move to demonetise and try to hinder black money was appreciated but the manner in which it was carried out by causing hardships to common people was criticised 241 A Parliamentary panel report in April 2017 stated that rural households and honest taxpayers were the worst hit by demonetisation 242 It said that it was not just the poor that suffered but the manufacturing sector was impacted too 243 According to the panel demonetisation created significant disruption throughout economy because it was carried out without prior study or research 244 245 An Indian National Congress led opposition which includes 13 political parties opposed the government on the issue of demonetisation in the Winter Session of the Indian Parliament 246 247 248 249 On 16 November 2016 Mamata Banerjee led a delegation comprising political parties of Trinamool Congress Aam Aadmi Party BJP ally Shiv Sena and National Conference to Rashtrapati Bhawan to protest against the demonetisation A memorandum was submitted to the President of India Pranab Mukherjee demanding rollback of the decision 250 11 Prem Chand Gupta a member of the Rashtriya Janata Dal questioned a statement of Modi from the unscheduled TV broadcast on 8 November If it was planned 10 months ago how did RBI Governor Urjit Patel sign on new note Praful Patel a member of the Nationalist Congress Party stated that the government was not even prepared to recalibrate the ATMs while announcing the move People s suffering are unimaginable Nobody is questioning the government s intention but you are unprepared to execute the move Later the former Chief Minister of Uttar Pradesh Mayawati called the situation a financial emergency saying It looks as if Bharat has shut down Also Sitaram Yechury from the Communist Party of India questioned the government on the demonetisation move by stating only 6 of black money in India is in cash to drive his point that demonetisation won t curb illicit wealth 251 On 17 November 2016 Chief Minister of Delhi Arvind Kejriwal and his West Bengal counterpart Mamata Banerjee led a rally against demonetisation at Azadpur Mandi the biggest vegetable and fruits wholesale market in New Delhi 252 On 24 November 2016 former prime minister Manmohan Singh said this scheme will hurt small industries the farming sector The GDP can decline by about 3 percent due to this move He called the demonetisation an organised loot legalised plunder of the common people 253 254 Strikes were organised across India Opposition parties like the Indian National Congress Bahujan Samaj Party Trinamool Congress 255 DMK JD U AIADMK Nationalist Congress Party Left Rashtriya Janata Dal and the Samajwadi Party 256 decided to observe Akrosh Diwas as a protest campaign day on 28 November 257 258 and launch protests in front of banks demanding that money be returned to people 259 In the state of Bihar 15 trains were blocked and stranded while the states of West Bengal Maharashtra and Uttar Pradesh saw protest marches and rallies led by opposition parties 260 In the state of Kerala shops and business establishments were shut with schools and colleges closed throughout the state while movements of private vehicles were also disrupted in Northern Kerala 260 Former Indian Chief Election Commissioner O P Rawat stated that the note ban had absolutely no impact on black money and that record amounts of money had been seized in polls held after demonetisation 261 International reactions Edit By and large initial international response was positive which saw the move as a bold crackdown on corruption 262 263 264 The International Monetary Fund s spokesperson Gerry Rice told that it supported the efforts to fight corruption and illegal finances but cautioned about the disruptions 262 Chinese state media Global Times praised the move as a fierce fight against black money and corruption 263 Former Prime Minister of Finland and vice president of European Commission Jyrki Katainen welcomed the demonetisation move stressing that bringing transparency will strengthen the Indian economy 265 266 BBC s South Asia Correspondent Justin Rowlatt in his article praised the move for its secrecy 267 Tim Worstall wrote in Forbes that demonetisation was having positive macroeconomic effects 268 Swedish Minister of Enterprise Mikael Damberg supported the move by calling it a bold decision 264 The demonetisation also came in for sharp criticism from media outside India 269 270 with The New York Times saying that the demonetisation was atrociously planned and that it did not appear to have combatted black money 271 272 while an article in The Guardian stated that Modi has brought havoc to India 269 The Harvard Business Review called it a case study in poor policy and even poorer execution 273 The frequent change in the narrative on objectives of the demonetisation to its visible impact on the poorest of the poor made other critiques calling the government s narrative as spins in view of the pointless suffering on India s poorest 274 Political impact EditAkshay Mangala an assistant professor at Harvard Business School called the move the politics of visible disruption He noted that the people might attribute the implementation shortcomings to institutional weakness while the government could take credit for its attempt to curb the black money He also noted that it may result in the public opinion in favour of the government which is led by the BJP if the opposition parties led by the INC fail to form the countervailing narrative 275 Massachusetts Institute of Technology associated academics Abhijit Banerjee and Namrata Kala also opined the same 203 The BJP and its allies formed the government in six out of seven state legislative assemblies which went to the elections in 2017 including the most populous state Uttar Pradesh 203 276 277 278 BJP improved its performance in Uttarakhand 276 278 279 and Himachal Pradesh 280 281 In Manipur and Goa INC secured the plurality while BJP came second and formed the government with the help of its allies 278 282 In Gujarat BJP worsened its performance but retained the majority 283 280 The BJP and its allies lost to the INC in Punjab 278 Long term impact EditThis section needs to be updated Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information June 2022 In 2019 India experienced an economic slowdown which was attributed to demonetisation and several other factors 284 285 In 2020 a large number of users switched to digital payments with ease following the increase in COVID 19 pandemic in India The rise in digital payments and cashless transactions was attributed to the demonetisation Although with the new data released by RBI in Nov 2021 it is evident that cash circulation in India has actually increased by multi fold since demonetization and demonetization has not necessarily transferred cash users to digital users 286 As of November 2021 further increase in digital payments and bank notes in circulation was seen 287 In popular culture EditPuthan Panam a 2017 film directed by Renjith based on the issue of black money and demonetisation Aadu 2 a 2017 film revolves around demonetisation Golak Bugni Bank Te Batua a 2018 Punjabi film also revolves around demonetisation Chappad Phaad Ke a 2019 Disney Hotstar film revolves around demonetisation Choked a 2020 Netflix film directed by Anurag Kashyap is set in backdrop of demonetisation Cash 2021 Hotstar Avrodh The Siege Within 2 a 2022 web series on SonyLIVSee also Edit Money portal India portalIndian black money Mahatma Gandhi New Series Income declaration scheme 2016 Pradhan Mantri Garib Kalyan YojanaReferences Edit a b c d Withdrawal of Legal Tender Status for 500 and 1000 Notes RBI Notice Revised Reserve Bank of India 9 November 2016 Retrieved 9 November 2016 Modi urges country to become a cashless society The Hindu 27 November 2016 Here is what PM Modi said about the new Rs 500 Rs 2000 notes and black money India Today 8 November 2016 Retrieved 9 November 2016 Notes out of circulation The Times of India 8 November 2016 Saikia Bijoy Sankar 18 November 2016 Demonetisation may drag India behind China in GDP growth rob fastest growing economy tag The Economic Times Retrieved 5 January 2017 The dire consequences of India s demonetisation initiative The Economist 3 December 2016 Retrieved 5 January 2017 Demonetization Announcement Anniversary 2017 Onmanorama OnManorama Retrieved 7 November 2017 a b India demonetisation Chaos as ATMs run dry Al Jazeera 9 November 2016 Retrieved 9 November 2016 a b Demonetisation Chaos grows queues get longer at banks ATMs on weekend Indian Express 12 November 2016 100 days of demonetisation Stories of hardship Al Jazeera a b India Demonetisation takes its toll on the poor Al Jazeera 16 November 2016 Retrieved 17 November 2016 Demonetisation Death Toll Rises To 25 And It s Only Been 6 Days huffingtonpost Archived from the original on 16 November 2016 Retrieved 15 November 2016 a b Mundy Simon Kazmin Amy Stacey Kiran 31 August 2017 India demonetisation failed to purge black money Financial Times Retrieved 31 August 2017 a b India rupee Illegal cash crackdown failed bank report BBC News 30 August 2017 Retrieved 31 August 2017 a b Rukhaiyar Ashish 9 November 2016 Sensex crashes 1 689 points on black money crackdown U S election The Hindu Retrieved 9 November 2016 Thanks to Demonetisation and GST India s GDP growth hit a 4 year low at 6 5 per cent India Today Retrieved 2 October 2018 a b Demonetisation drive that cost India 1 5m jobs fails to uncover black money the Guardian 30 August 2018 Retrieved 31 July 2021 Moving from Cash to Cashless Economy Toward Digital India Korea Distribution Science Association Demonetisation debate in Parliament Disaster says Chidambaram high cash economy corrupt counters Jaitley India News India Today Indiatoday intoday in 9 February 2017 Retrieved 26 June 2017 Demonetisation Opposition calls for countrywide protest on November 28 The Indian Express 23 November 2016 Retrieved 23 November 2016 Demonetisation Opposition parties join hands to hold protest day on November 28 The Indian Express 23 November 2016 Retrieved 24 November 2016 Demonetisation protest sure to succeed with people s support The Economic Times 24 November 2016 Retrieved 24 November 2016 Demonetisation Three times India faced the big move The Indian Express 16 November 2018 Retrieved 18 October 2018 Gopika Gopakumar Vishwanath Nair 9 November 2016 Rs 500 Rs 1000 notes may be back if history is a guide Live Mint Retrieved 9 November 2016 At least 4 months needed to replace demonetised notes not 50 days Here s why The Indian Express 14 November 2016 Measures to Tackle Black Money in India and Abroad PDF Appu Esthose Suresh 12 November 2016 Why govt s demonetisation move may fail to win the war against black money Hindustan Times Retrieved 12 November 2016 Rs 500 Rs 1 000 note rumours not polls behind cash surge SBI The Times of India 8 April 2016 Retrieved 12 November 2016 India demonetization news Modi s black money move kept a closely guarded secret CNBC 9 December 2016 Roychoudhury Arup 10 November 2016 Demonetisation In the works for 6 months 10 people in the loop including Raghuram Rajan Business Standard India Retrieved 23 January 2017 Move was in the pipeline for months The Hindu 9 November 2016 Retrieved 9 November 2016 ePaper link from Hindi daily Dainik Jagran of 27th October 2016 Dainik Jagran Epaper Archived from the original on 23 November 2016 Retrieved 23 November 2016 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link Journalist broke story about currency demonetisation a fortnight back Hindustan Times 11 November 2016 Retrieved 12 November 2016 The Hindu business line article about coming 2000 Rupee note and possible withdrawal of 500 and 1000 rupee notes Archived from the original on 25 February 2017 a b Lahiri Amartya 1 February 2020 The Great Indian Demonetization Journal of Economic Perspectives 34 1 63 55 74 doi 10 1257 jep 34 1 55 ISSN 0895 3309 Patel Urjit R The Minutes of the 561st meeting of the Central Board of Directors of the Reserve Bank of India PDF humanrightsinitiative org Retrieved 31 December 2021 ENS Economic Bureau 12 March 2019 Govt RBI discussed note ban for six months Directors warned against short term negative effect Indian Express Retrieved 31 December 2021 Sinha Smita 7 November 2017 One year of note ban The ultra secret move that no one came to know for several months The Economic Times Bhatt Abhinav 8 November 2016 Watch PM Modi s Entire Speech on Discontinuing 500 1000 Rupee Notes NDTV India Retrieved 8 November 2016 Demonetisation of Rs 500 and Rs 1000 notes RBI explains The Hindu 8 November 2016 Retrieved 10 November 2016 Demonetisation anniversary Full text of Prime Minister Narendra Modi s speech from 8 November 2016 Firstpost First Post 8 November 2017 Retrieved 26 February 2018 Sethi Aman 6 November 2016 Before PM s Announcement Rumours of Demonetisation Abounded The Quint Retrieved 12 November 2016 Demonetisation Ambani Adani were informed and thus made arrangements says BJP MLA 17 November 2016 Retrieved 24 November 2016 Adanis Ambanis already knew about currency ban BJP MLA caught on camera Retrieved 24 November 2016 a b c Finance Ministry has reviewed the position regarding availability and distribution of all denominations of bank notes PDF Ministry of Finance Government of India Archived from the original PDF on 14 November 2016 Retrieved 13 November 2016 a b c Withdrawal of Legal Tender Character of existing 500 and 1000 Bank Notes Revision in limits Reserve Bank of India Retrieved 17 March 2017 a b 17 November Government press release PDF Ministry of Finance Government of India Archived from the original PDF on 17 November 2016 Retrieved 17 November 2016 All note exchange stopped from today PM Modi goes back on promise of hike after November 24 25 November 2016 Outlets that will accept Rs 1 000 and Rs 500 notes in next 72 hours The Economic Times 8 November 2016 Retrieved 9 November 2016 With effect from the midnight of 2nd December 2016 old Rs 500 bank notes will not be accepted at petrol diesel and gas outlets of Public Sector Oil and Gas Marketing Companies as well as for purchase of Air Tickets at Airports However supply of LPG continues to be in the exempted category for the purpose of payment through old Rs 500 bank notes PDF Ministry of Finance Government of India 1 December 2016 Retrieved 11 January 2017 a b RBI removes limit on cash withdrawal banks go back to pre demonetisation era The Financial Express 13 March 2017 Retrieved 26 May 2017 ATMs Non dispensing of Old High Denomination Notes Closure of operations Reserve Bank of India 8 November 2016 Retrieved 8 November 2016 Cash withdrawal from ATMs Enhancement of daily limits Reserve Bank of India 30 December 2016 Retrieved 17 March 2017 Demonetisation rule modified families can withdraw Rs 2 5 lakh for weddings from one a count India Today 17 November 2016 Retrieved 17 November 2016 The Specified Banknotes Ordinance 2016 PDF Cabinet clears ordinance to punish people holding banned notes beyond deadline hindustantimes com 28 December 2016 Retrieved 10 January 2017 Govt notifies law to make possession of old Rs500 Rs1000 notes punishable Live Mint 1 March 2017 Retrieved 18 October 2018 Demonetisation and the fight against black money 7 November 2017 Demonetisation Was Not Designed Only to Fight Black Money Says Finance Minister Jaitley Demonetisation achieved objectives quite substantially Govt Times of India The Times of India Goal of Demonetisation Modi s Promise Vs Jaitley s Defence Why Were the Notes Scrapped RBI Chief Economic Affairs Secy Explain News 18 8 November 2016 Retrieved 9 November 2016 Sabnavis Madan 6 November 2017 One year of demonetisation Changing goal posts and limited impact Business Standard India Retrieved 11 November 2021 RBI report on demonetisation How Centre BJP kept moving the goalposts The Financial Express 31 August 2017 Retrieved 11 November 2021 PM Modi Shifting Goalposts on Demonetisation On 4th Anniversary Congress Asks What Was Achieved News18 8 November 2020 Retrieved 11 November 2021 Demonetisation As money flowed back in how goalposts were shifted The Indian Express 31 August 2017 Retrieved 11 November 2021 Instant Recall How Modi Government Kept Changing Demonetisation s Goalposts The Wire Retrieved 11 November 2021 Demonetisation Rs 14 lakh crore in old notes are back only Rs 75 000 crore out The Indian Express 9 January 2017 Retrieved 22 January 2017 a b c d e Dutta Prabash K 30 August 2018 Demonetisation What India gained and lost India Today Retrieved 12 October 2018 Parmar Beena 13 November 2016 Despite Rs 4000 cap on money exchange loophole allows multiple transactions Hindustan Times Retrieved 13 November 2016 Demonetisation In Chennai To beat cash limit they send full teams to bank The Indian Express 15 November 2016 Gold price recovers on renewed demand Hindustan Times 10 November 2016 Retrieved 10 November 2016 Langa Mahesh 9 November 2016 Scramble for gold in Gujarat after demonetisation The Hindu Retrieved 9 November 2016 Enforcement Directorate raids forex shops making back date entries The Economic Times 16 November 2016 Netas using co op banks for backdated FDs DDs Times of India The Times of India Sahgal Ram 10 November 2016 Jewellers issue backdated invoices to clients The Economic Times The Economic Times Rathi Pranshu 29 November 2016 Back dated receipts used for Apple iPhone sales after demonetisation Report International Business Times Tiffin service to dental implants All tried to beat system swap old notes 5 December 2016 Rs 500 Rs 1000 demonetisation Temple money from hundis not to come under scanner 10 November 2016 13 Ways In Which Indians Will Convert Their Black Money Into White Even After Demonetisation Demonetisation Temples across India receive high currency notes as donations 18 November 2016 Religious places getting over the demon of note ban Times of India The Times of India Mohapatra Debabrata 10 November 2016 Rush to offer Rs 500 Rs 1000 donations at Puri Temple The Times of India Staff Reporter 14 November 2016 Defunct notes worth Rs 44 lakh found in temple hundi The Hindu Rlys sets 5000 as cash refund limit for tickets Retrieved 15 November 2016 Railways say no cash refund for tickets booked between Nov 9 11 Retrieved 15 November 2016 a b c d How Successful was Demonetisation Four Takeaways From the RBI s Annual Report The Wire 30 August 2018 Retrieved 13 October 2018 a b c d e f Padmanabhan Vishnu 3 September 2018 From GDP growth to black money costs outweigh benefits of demonetisation Mint Retrieved 20 October 2018 Only 1 2 of 1 000 notes not returned to banks RBI report The Hindu 30 August 2017 Retrieved 26 February 2018 via www thehindu com a b Has demonetisation really boosted income tax collections 23 May 2017 Did Demonetisation Increase Tax Base Not Really Sharma Tanisha 25 September 2018 Did cash ban help raise tax base ITRs rising but not tax collection The Economic Times Demonetisation impact Greater Hyderabad Municipal Corporation collects over Rs 160 crore in just four days india com 15 November 2016 a b c Was the boost in digital payments after demonetization temporary 26 April 2018 Heller Nathan India Takes a Big Step Back from Cash The New Yorker Dwivedi Yogesh India taking a step on the road to cashless economy The Conversation Wade Shepard A Cashless Future Is The Real Goal Of India s Demonetization Move Forbes Reserve Bank of India Press Releases rbi org in Retrieved 11 November 2021 Damodaran Harish 9 November 2016 Are banks equipped to replace 2 300 crore pieces of Rs 500 and Rs 1 000 notes The Indian Express Retrieved 9 November 2016 Currency in circulation slows down since May 24 September 2018 Cash in circulation jumps 19 1 per cent from pre demonetisation level The Indian Express 22 March 2019 Retrieved 25 March 2019 Five Years Since Demonetisation Value Of Cash In Circulation Up 64 NDTV com Retrieved 11 November 2021 Nearly 5 years since note ban Cash with public rising at all time high The Indian Express 5 November 2021 Retrieved 11 November 2021 Demonetisation leads to highest ever surrender of Maoists in a month Times of India The Times of India Cops look for Maoists with old currency The Times of India Archived from the original on 28 November 2016 Modi s demonetization set to cripple Naxalites financially The Times of India This Is How Big Note Ban Will Affect Maoist Activities in Chhattisgarh Demonetisation to hit Maoist activities in Chhattisgarh Police 13 November 2016 Congress says demonetisation didn t affect Maoism says 17 Naxal attacks took place since note ban 18 November 2017 Demonetisation caused little disruption to Maoist economy in Bastar extortion major source of funding 27 July 2018 Jain Bharti 13 July 2018 Demonetisation effect Funds tap turns dry for terror and Maoist groups The Economic Times Did demonetisation impact terrorism 23 November 2017 Queues get longer at banks ATMs on weekend The Hindu 12 November 2016 Ganapatye Mayuresh 8 December 2016 Demonetisation Month later long queues still outside banks and ATMs in Mumbai India Today Demonetisation pain returns One fourth of ATMs across India running dry again Hindustan Times 7 February 2017 As ATMs dry up bankers say normalcy will return soon The Indian Express 11 April 2017 Retrieved 25 April 2017 Bhakta Pratik 5 April 2017 Cash in short supply note crunch returns The Economic Times The Economic Times Retrieved 25 April 2017 Gopal B Madhu 19 April 2017 ATMs run out of cash in many areas The Hindu Retrieved 25 April 2017 17 of cash seized in raids during demonetisation were in new notes Times of India The Times of India Cash crunch Rs 242 crore in new currency seized after demonetisation Hindustan Times 9 December 2016 Over Rs 164 crore black money seized in new notes Has note ban failed As India struggles for its next Rs 2 000 new currency seized across country can fill gunny bags 9 December 2016 Demonetization With no cash on hand 4 lakh trucks stranded on highways 14 November 2016 Retrieved 14 November 2016 Toll tax suspended on national highways till Nov 11 banks open this weekend Hindustan Times 9 November 2016 Retrieved 10 November 2016 Toll collection on all national highways suspended till December 2 Business Today 24 November 2016 Retrieved 17 October 2018 Sensex sinks 514pts Midcap down 4 on demonetisation amp earnings moneycontrol com Retrieved 16 November 2016 Chakravarty Manas 3 January 2017 How much has demonetisation affected the stock market LiveMint Retrieved 17 October 2018 Mukundan Anagha 1 June 2017 Impact of Demonetisation on Indian Stock Market A P J Abdul Kalam Technological University doi 10 13140 rg 2 2 24870 63042 Anoop Patil Parab Narayan Reddy Y V 2018 Analyzing the Impact of Demonetization on the Indian Stock Market Sectoral Evidence using GARCH Model Australasian Accounting Business and Finance Journal 12 2 104 116 doi 10 14453 aabfj v12i2 7 ISSN 1834 2000 Demonetisation hit economy Jamir The Hindu 23 February 2017 Retrieved 26 February 2017 a b Seth Dilasha 6 December 2016 Slowdown due to demonetisation PMI services shrinks in November after 17 months Business Standard India via Business Standard a b 5 Bleak Numbers That Show Demonetisation Impact On The Economy Demonetisation impact Three sets of numbers tell us how Modi s gamble has slowed the economy 3 January 2017 How Demonetisation Has Affected India s Agricultural And Food Markets Huffington Post India Archived from the original on 25 November 2016 Retrieved 24 November 2016 Demonetisation Farmers fear loss of crops and income after currency ban Firstpost 18 November 2016 Retrieved 24 November 2016 Demonetisation Farmers protest in Muzaffarnagar over cash shortage Press Trust of India 22 November 2016 Demonetisation At Gujarat protests farmers dump milk vegetables on road The Indian Express 20 November 2016 Retrieved 24 November 2016 Farmers in Amritsar stage protest against demonetisation burn PM Modi s effigy Hindustan Times 19 November 2016 Demonetisation Gujarat farmers warn of stopping milk supply demand note exchange at co op banks Firstpost 19 November 2016 Retrieved 24 November 2016 Farmers forced to dump their produce as note ban turns bumper crop worthless Hindustan Times 26 December 2016 Retrieved 15 January 2017 Oh nion Farmers in crisis dump produce in markets instead of selling at 50 paise a kilo India Today Retrieved 15 January 2017 Demonetisation protest Farmers throw vegetables on road 7 January 2017 Retrieved 15 January 2017 Demonetisation At Gujarat protests farmers dump milk vegetables on road 20 November 2016 Retrieved 15 January 2017 Kishore Roshan 7 November 2018 Two years after demonetisation farmers and rural workers are unhappy Hindustan Times Retrieved 17 November 2018 a b c GDP growth slips to 5 7 in April June The Hindu Special Correspondent 31 August 2017 ISSN 0971 751X Retrieved 19 October 2018 a href Template Cite news html title Template Cite news cite news a CS1 maint others link a b c GDP grows at 5 quarter high of 7 2 in Oct Dec The Times of India Retrieved 19 October 2018 a b GDP Growth Recovers to 6 3 in September Quarter The Wire Retrieved 19 October 2018 a b c Raghavan Tca Sharad 30 November 2015 GDP growth accelerates to 7 4 in July Sept manufacturing rebounds significantly The Hindu ISSN 0971 751X Retrieved 20 October 2018 a b c Demonetisation impact GDP dips sharply in Jan Mar to 6 1 India loses fastest growing tag Firstpost com 31 May 2017 Retrieved 26 June 2017 Livemint 24 November 2016 Cash crunch Analysts cut India GDP growth forecast Demonetisation a big blow GDP growth may dip below 6 in FY17 26 December 2016 World Economic Outlook Database International Monetary Fund October 2016 Choudhury Saheli Roy 17 January 2017 India set for slowest growth period as demonetization dents economy CNBC Demonetisation effect GDP growth slows down to 6 1 in March quarter Businesstoday in 1 June 2017 Retrieved 26 June 2017 Demonetisation impact GDP dips sharply in Jan Mar to 6 1 India loses fastest growing tag Firstpost com 31 May 2017 Retrieved 26 June 2017 Demonetisation brings GDP down to 6 1 per cent Top economists stand vindicated In news yahoo com 1 June 2017 Retrieved 26 June 2017 GDP growth rate down to 5 7 in April June demonetisation pain lingers business news Hindustan Times 31 August 2017 Retrieved 25 February 2018 Press Trust of India 1 September 2017 India paid hefty price for note ban 5 7 GDP growth worrying Kaushik Basu Business Standard News Business Standard India Business standard com Retrieved 25 February 2018 India s GDP grows at 8 2 per cent in 2018 19 Q1 The Economic Times 31 August 2018 Roshan Kishore 8 November 2021 Five years since demonetisation What has changed The Hindustan Times a b Vyas Mahesh 17 July 2018 Employment stagnates in 2017 18 CMIE Archived from the original on 19 October 2018 Retrieved 19 October 2018 a b Demonetisation effect 1 5 million jobs lost in first 4 months of the year Retrieved 3 July 2018 a b Unemployment Archived from the original on 20 October 2018 India Unemployment Rate 1991 2021 Yadav Anumeha Cashless and demonetised Meet three Indians who once had jobs PTI 22 January 2017 Demonetisation has negative impact on jobs SMEs says Assocham survey Now Demonetisation set to cost 400 000 jobs 24 November 2016 Unprecedented Job Losses Wage Decline in Unorganised Sector Post Demonetisation The Wire Maganti Rahul 18 November 2016 How Demonetisation Is Affecting Migrant Labourers In Kerala The Caravan Retrieved 24 August 2018 Dave Sohini Das amp Vimukt 10 December 2016 Demonetisation impact Migrant workers head back home Business Standard India Retrieved 25 August 2018 RBI dividend halves to Rs 30 659 cr Demonetisation hero turns out to be villain for Narendra Modi govt 11 August 2017 Retrieved 31 August 2017 Script gone wrong RBI takes demonetisation hit and government gets a cut 11 August 2017 Retrieved 31 August 2017 Half dividend full fallacy RBI implies Modi amp Urjit Patel got demonetisation wrong Archived from the original on 22 August 2017 Retrieved 31 August 2017 IAF charged Rs 29 41cr to ferry currency notes post demonetisation About false promises 14 September 2018 Dayashankar K m 2 December 2016 Midday meal workers hit by demonetisation The Hindu ISSN 0971 751X Retrieved 24 August 2018 Demonetisation hits mid day meal scheme too Deccan Herald 3 January 2017 Retrieved 24 August 2018 permanent dead link Mid day meal scheme faces a crisis due to note ban The Tribune The Costs of Demonetisation Farm Economy Takes a Hit Mid Day Meal Scheme in Peril The Wire Retrieved 24 August 2018 Two dead in Maharashtra Kerala in country wide rush to junk banned notes Indian Express 11 November 2016 Demonetisation Rush for cash kills 2 in Kerala 1 in Maharashtra Congress blames Modi government India Today Demonetisation 96 year old died while standing in queue United News of India 12 November 2016 Farmer standing in line to exchange notes dies of heart attack Press Trust of India 12 November 2016 Three People Die While Waiting in Queue To Exchange Rs 500 and Rs 1 000 Currency Notes Huffington Post India 11 November 2016 Archived from the original on 13 November 2016 Retrieved 13 November 2016 2 die in queue to exchange banned notes at bank The Times of India 11 November 2016 Retrieved 13 November 2016 Mumbai Baby dies waiting for medical help as hospital refuses Rs 500 amp 1000 currency notes India com 12 November 2016 Retrieved 13 November 2016 Doc says no to deposit in Rs 500 notes baby dies awaiting help Mumbai Mirror Sadaguru Pandit 12 November 2016 Infant s death Doc booked over claims of refusing treatment in Mumbai Hindustan Times Staff The Wire 2 December 2016 The Costs of Demonetisation Death Toll Rises to 82 Eight Million Workers Remain Unpaid The Wire India Retrieved 2 January 2023 Demonetization Government not mourning over 100 deaths due to cash crunch says Opposition 8 December 2016 IANS 31 December 2016 Mamata attacks Modi over cash withdrawal limit demonetisation deaths Business Standard India via Business Standard Around 105 died but Twitter king Modi didn t mention it Lalu on demonetisation Indo Asian News Service 22 December 2016 No official report on deaths due to demonetisation Government The New Indian Express 17 March 2017 Retrieved 26 June 2017 S Deepika 19 December 2018 After two years of denial govt admits death due to demonetisation One India Govt s demonetisation move fit for country s security development HC The Economic Times 10 November 2016 Retrieved 10 November 2016 PILs in Supreme Court against making Rs 500 Rs 1000 notes illegal India Today 10 November 2016 Retrieved 10 November 2016 SC refers individual cases against demonetisation to constitution bench 3 November 2017 RBI turns away people wanting to exchange old notes Tribuneindia com 3 January 2017 Retrieved 26 June 2017 Nanjappa Vicky 1 April 2017 Unable to deposit demonetised currency in RBI 1 000s to approach Supreme Court Oneindia Retrieved 26 June 2017 SC disposes of petitions seeking fresh chance to deposit old notes Indian Express 4 November 2017 Scroll Staff 2 January 2023 Supreme Court upholds demonetisation by 4 1 majority Scroll in Retrieved 2 January 2023 Notes Ban Order Unlawful Vitiated Dissenting Supreme Court Judge NDTV com Retrieved 3 January 2023 a b c Banerjee Abhijit Kala Namrata 21 June 2017 The economic and political consequences of India s demonetisation VoxDev Retrieved 3 November 2018 War on black money Demonetisation is a courageous reform that will bring substantive benefits The Indian Express 14 December 2016 Retrieved 31 October 2022 Demonetisation effects will last long The Hindu 26 February 2017 Retrieved 26 February 2017 PTI 30 November 2016 Amartya Sen terms demonetisation a despotic action The Hindu Desk India com News 26 November 2016 Amartya Sen criticises demonetisation drive says Narendra Modi declared all Indians crook Roychoudhury Arup 12 November 2016 Demonetisation damage greater than its benefits says Kaushik Basu Business Standard Retrieved 12 November 2016 PTI 11 November 2016 GST good economics demonetisation is not Kaushik Basu The Economic Times Retrieved 12 November 2016 Basu Kaushik 27 November 2016 In India Black Money Makes for Bad Policy The New York Times Sen Pronab 14 November 2016 Demonetization is a hollow move Patnaik Prabhat 9 November 2016 Demonetization Witless and Anti People The Citizen Archived from the original on 19 November 2016 Retrieved 13 November 2016 Nobel winner Richar Thaler applauded PM Narendra Modi s demonetisation did not favour Rs 2000 note Business Today 10 October 2017 Ninan T N 2 December 2016 T N Ninan Four weeks later Business Standard India via Business Standard a b Forbes Steve What India Has Done To Its Money Is Sickening And Immoral Forbes HTLS 2016 Demonetisation gains uncertain says Nobel laureate Paul Krugman 2 December 2016 a b Govt demonitises Rs 500 1000 notes Here is how India Inc reacted The Indian Express 8 November 2016 Retrieved 9 November 2016 Demonetisation We should all be celebrating says Narayana Murthy The Economic Times 10 November 2016 Narayana Murthy 9 November 2016 Move to withdraw Rs 500 1 000 notes masterstroke HDFC Chairman Deepak Parekh hits out at demonetisation drive says it derailed economy 8 December 2016 HDFC s Deepak Parekh says economy has derailed in short term due to demonetisation 8 December 2016 Demonetisation idea wrong don t blame its execution Rajiv Bajaj 17 February 2017 Rs 500 amp 1000 currency notes banned Congress raises questions against Narendra Modi govt s shocking move India com 8 November 2016 Retrieved 9 November 2016 Nitish welcomes demonetisation move The Hindu 9 November 2016 Nitish Kumar supports Modi s demonetisation move The Times of India Bihar CM Nitish Kumar supports decision to withdraw Rs 1000 Rs 500 notes Indian Express 9 November 2016 Venkateshwarlu K 9 November 2016 Demonetisation of Rs 500 Rs 1000 notes Naidu had inkling of the ban The Hindu Reporter B S 9 November 2016 Andhra CM Naidu asked for demonetisation of Rs 500 Rs 1 000 notes in October Business Standard India via Business Standard Chandrababu Naidu welcomes demonetisation move Demonetisation could lead to long pending electoral reforms 11 November 2016 Anna Hazare hails demonetisation calls it revolutionary step The Economic Times 10 November 2016 Demonetisation a revolutionary step to fight corruption Anna Hazare 10 November 2016 Notes Ban Anna Hazare Hails PM Narendra Modi s Revolutionary Step Kejriwal Criticizes It President Pranab Mukherjee welcomes demonetisation of Rs 1 000 and Rs 500 notes india com 8 November 2016 Demonetisation of Rs 1 000 and Rs 500 notes bold step President Pranab Mukherjee The Indian Express 8 November 2016 President Pranab Mukherjee Welcomes Demonetisation of Rs 1 000 Rs 500 Notes ndtv com A bold step says Pranab Mukherjee The Hindu 9 November 2016 One Month Of Pain And Harassment PM Must Clarify Mamata Banerjee ANI 12 November 2016 Demonetization is nothing but a big BJP scam Kejriwal Business Standard India via Business Standard Kerala CM Pinarayi Vijayan ministers stage dharna outside RBI office Latest News amp Updates at Daily News amp Analysis 18 November 2016 Raghav Bahl 8 November 2016 Dear PM Modi Demonetisation Brahmastra Could Have Spared The Poor Bloomberg Quint Retrieved 12 November 2016 Honest taxpayers rural household hardest hit due to demonetisation Parliamentary Panel Moneycontrol com 11 April 2017 Retrieved 25 April 2017 Jjayesh shanrilal 11 April 2017 Demonetisation Rural household honest taxpayers worst due to the step says Parliamentary committee The Financial Express Retrieved 25 April 2017 Demonetisation created significant disruption throughout economy Panel The New Indian Express Retrieved 25 April 2017 Committee report PDF Debate on demonetisation in winter session DNA India com 15 November 2016 Opposition to target government on demonetisation Business Standard 15 November 2016 Parties agree to raise notes issue in session The Economic Times 15 November 2016 Pathak Vikas Vasudeva Vikas 18 November 2016 As it happened RS LS adjourned till Monday The Hindu Retrieved 18 November 2016 Demonetisation of Rs 500 Rs 1000 notes Mamata Banerjee leads protest march to Rashtrapati Bhavan The Indian Express 16 November 2016 Retrieved 17 November 2016 Desk Internet 16 November 2016 As it happened Parliament proceedings November 16 2016 The Hindu Retrieved 16 November 2016 Resolve cash crunch in 3 days or face rebellion Mamata Kejriwal to Govt Hindustan Times 17 November 2016 Retrieved 17 November 2016 Is Modi proving Manmohan Singh right with slew of U turns on cash ban The Economic Times 26 November 2016 Vasudeva Vikas Pathak Vikas 24 November 2016 Parliament Proceedings Both Houses adjourned PM absent The Hindu Retrieved 24 November 2016 Oppositions will protest ndtv com 23 November 2016 Akrosh Diwas Hindustan times 23 November 2016 Opposition stands together Telegraph India Calcutta 23 November 2016 CPI M 28 November as Akrosh Diwas Indian Express 23 November 2016 November 28 Akrosh Diwas by opposition Hindustan Times 23 November 2016 a b As it happened Bharat Bandh affects some states business as usual in others Hindustan Times 28 November 2016 Retrieved 28 November 2016 OP Rawat Note ban had absolutely no impact on black money During polls we seized a record amount 2 December 2018 a b Support by IMF Business Standard 11 November 2016 a b Aneja Atul 14 November 2016 State media praises Modi but says he can learn from China s crusade against corruption The Hindu a b S Arun 13 November 2016 Swedish ICT sector wouldn t have been so successful without Indian help The Hindu European Union welcomes India s step on demonetisation The Economic Times 13 November 2016 India s Crackdown on Black Money Will Help Financial System European Union 13 November 2016 Rowlatt Justin 14 November 2016 Why India wiped out 86 of its cash overnight bbc com Worstall Tim India s Rs 500 And 1 000 Demonetization Is Lowering Interest Rates And Also Inflation Forbes Retrieved 24 November 2016 a b Modi s demonetisation move a reckless bungle Foreign media The Times of India 28 December 2016 Singh Gayeti 23 November 2016 Worst Mistake of PM Modi s Career World Media and Economists Decry Demonetisation Havoc in India The Citizen Archived from the original on 16 January 2017 Demonetisation atrociously planned little evidence it combatted black money New York Times Little evidence that demonetisation has succeeded in combating corruption New York Times 10 January 2017 Chakravorti Bhaskar 14 December 2016 India s Botched War on Cash Harvard Business Review Goswami Ranjit 25 November 2016 Modi s bank note ban has inflicted pointless suffering on India s poorest The Conversation Retrieved 25 January 2017 Mangala Akshay 30 January 2017 Demonetization The Politics of Visible Disruption Center for the Advanced Study of India CASI University of Pennsylvania Retrieved 3 November 2018 a b Murty B Vijay 11 March 2017 Assembly elections 2017 Modi loses no money in demonetisation gamble Hindustan Times Retrieved 3 November 2018 Sukumar R 11 March 2017 The BJP s UP surge Didn t demonetisation matter Live Mint Retrieved 3 November 2018 a b c d Peeyush Parimal 7 November 2017 Demonetisation a litmus test for BJP One year on can Modi hold his sway on the electorate Retrieved 3 November 2018 Assembly elections How the BJP won Uttarakhand Hindustan Times 11 March 2017 Retrieved 3 November 2018 a b BJP retains Gujarat ousts Congress from Himachal Pradesh Times of India The Times of India BJP juggernaut rolls on in Gujarat tramples Congress in Himachal Pradesh The Economic Times 18 December 2017 Post poll alliances were preferred by governor in Goa Manipur and Meghalaya The Times of India PTI 16 May 2018 Retrieved 3 November 2018 Unnikrishnan Dinesh 19 December 2017 BJP s Gujarat win proves GST demonetisation aren t potent weapons Congress needs new strategy to fight Modi FirstPost Retrieved 3 November 2018 Growth at 5 India s economy slows stalling once thriving manufacturing the Economic Times Archived from the original on 11 October 2019 Retrieved 4 January 2020 India s economy slows stalling once thriving manufacturing Associated Press 16 September 2019 How demonetisation is helping India transact under the shadow of Covid 19 in 2020 Financial Express India 24 December 2020 Post demonetisation notes in circulation on rise so are digital payments Business Standard 7 November 2021 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Indian 500 and 1000 rupee note demonetisation Wikinews has related news India discontinues 500 1000 denominations releases 2000 and new 500 bills What the FAQ just happened All your questions about Rs 500 1000 notes answered India Today 8 November 2016 FAQ answers and Guidelines on Reserve Bank of India Ministry of Finance Government of India Litvack L amp Vigne S 2017 Demonetisation in India and Emerging Challenges A Report Delivered to the Department for the Economy Northern Ireland and the Government of India by Queen s University Belfast and O P Jindal Global University Belfast Queen s University Belfast http pure qub ac uk portal files 131517443 Final report pdf Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 2016 Indian banknote demonetisation amp oldid 1136181525, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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