Anger rises after Modi govt scraps old Rs500 currency notes at petrol pumps
Latest News »
- India’s GDP to reach $5 trillion by 2025: Top official at World Bank
- Petrol price hit highest level under BJP govt, diesel at record high
- Govt serious in bringing fugitive economic offenders to task: Rajnath Singh
- Sushma Swaraj arrives in China for talks with Wang Yi, SCO meet
- Make the best of technology to deal with administrative delays: Modi tells bureaucrats
New Delhi: The government said old notes would no longer be accepted at petrol stations after Friday, fuelling anger over the scrapping of high denomination bills that has caused an unprecedented cash crunch.
Indians had been given until 15 December to use the old bills at filling stations but the government rushed forward the deadline on Thursday evening, giving millions of commuters still using the old Rs500 notes barely 24 hours to spend them.
“This cannot be right. First you say we have until 15 December and suddenly now you are saying something else,” said R. S. Yadav, a government employee, as he waited for his turn on a rickety two-wheeler at a refuelling station in New Delhi.
Prime Minister Narendra Modi sparked turmoil with his shock announcement last month that all Rs500 ($7.30) and Rs1,000 banknotes — some 86% of all bills in circulation — would cease to be legal tender.
The sweeping abolition of all high-value notes was meant to bring billions in so-called “black”, or undeclared, money back into the formal system, the government says.
The move has triggered chaos with long queues forming outside banks as people try to deposit their old notes or withdraw new ones.
Frequent rule changes in response to pressure from various groups and growing disorder have made matters worse.
Banks and ATMs have also been running out of cash with limits being put on withdrawals, forcing people to cut down their spending.
Those with old notes are allowed to deposit them into their bank accounts until year end but long bank queues had prompted many to use them at gas stations.
Cash accounts for 90% of transactions in India and the government has said it would take time before new bills are distributed.
“I was using my old notes up till now for filling petrol. Now I am dreading going to the bank. The government has no clue what we are being made to go through,” said Saurav Mallik, who works in the private sector.
The problem was not restricted to consumers, said Saima, who works as an attendant at a petrol filling station.
“I worry that there is going to be more confusion and chaos in the days ahead,” Saima, who uses only one name, told AFP. “Fights have already been breaking out.”
Latest News »
Sanskrit most suitable for machine learning, AI: Ram Nath Kovind
Aadhaar seeding must for bank accounts under KYC norms, say new RBI guidelines
IMF, World Bank must develop strategy for enhancing public debt transparency: India
CPM rules out alliance with Congress, but to have ‘understanding’
SCO meet: No bilaterals between foreign, defence ministers of India, Pakistan
Mark to Market »
IndusInd Bank’s big bad loan divergence foretells a painful bank results season
Investors in IBC companies face a harsh reality
Q4 results: Tata Consultancy Services ends FY18 well, will valuations tango?
RBI minutes show a repo rate hike is around the corner
ACC: Healthy volume growth, lower overhead expenses save the day