The Watch Internal Affairs OnlineReserve Bank of India (RBI), India’s federal bank, has now been touted as the ‘Reverse Bank of India’ or even the ‘Rollback Bank of India’, following its most recent U-turn that has to do with the deposit of scrapped currency notes.
Three days ago, the RBI had issued its 59th circular since demonetization, restricting people from depositing over Rs 5,000 ($73.7) in old banknotes more than once till Dec. 30.
One of the clauses had also said that any deposit exceeding that amount would be put through questioning by two bank officials, who have to be given a “satisfactory explanation” for why the old notes were not deposited earlier.
SEE ALSO: Reserve Bank of India website hit with 14X traffic post PM Modi's demonetization speechAfter severe backlash from citizens across societal strata, the RBI reversed its decision and declared that all KYC-compliant accounts are exempted from the Rs. 5,000 cap. This came after Indians, including leading politicians, resented against RBI’s move. Everyone claimed that they had gone by the government’s assurance of “time till Dec. 30”. Citizens took to social media to express their displeasure.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
But RBI’s changing guidelines should hardly come as a surprise now. Since Prime Minister Narendra Modi announced demonetization on the evening of Nov. 8, the RBI has “changed norms 126 times” as claimed by the Congress, India’s leading opposition party. Vice-president Rahul Gandhi even sent out a tweet mocking both the central bank and the Centre.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
The RBI’s repeated U-turns have drawn the ire and sarcasm of Indian people.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
Here’s a timeline of the major amendments made by the country’s premier banking institution since the note ban became effective.
Nov. 8: Rs 500 ($7.36) and Rs 1,000 ($14.72) notes are scrapped. These notes could be exchanged for Rs 4,000 ($59) at bank branches. New Rs 2,000 ($29.45) notes to be issued.
Nov. 10: Withdrawal limit set at Rs 10,000 ($147.29) per day and Rs 20,000 ($294.58) per week.
Nov. 11: RBI assures you that you have enough time to exchange your old notes. It also calls for calm at banks.
Nov. 13: Exchange limit raised to Rs 4,500 ($66.27) per day. Daily ATM withdrawal limit increased to Rs 2,500 ($36.82) per day. Withdrawal limit from branches increased to Rs 24,000 ($353.8) a week; daily limit removed.
Nov. 14: District Central Cooperative bank customers can withdraw Rs 24,000 per week, but cannot exchange old notes for new ones, or deposit old notes. Current account holders can withdraw Rs 50,000 ($736.37) per week.
Nov. 17: Exchange limit changed for the third time, reduced to Rs 2,000 per day.
Nov. 18: Cash withdrawal through point-of-sale systems made uniform at Rs 2,000 per day per account.
Nov. 23: Scrapped notes would not be accepted as deposits in small savings accounts.
Nov. 24: Exchange norms changed for the fourth time, RBI scraps the facility altogether at bank branches. Citizens can no longer exchange old notes, can only deposit the amount to their bank accounts.
Nov.25: Foreign citizens allowed exchanging their currency notes up to a limit of Rs 5,000 per week till Dec. 15.
Nov. 28: Withdrawals beyond the stipulated limit would be allowed if one deposited legal currency.
Dec. 19:Deposits above Rs. 5,000 will be allowed only once. Any more would be subjected to official scrutiny.
Dec 21: Rollback of Dec. 19 order, fully KYC-compliant bank accounts exempted from the Rs 5,000 cap.
Somewhere between Nov. 28 and Dec. 19, the RBI had issued an order claiming that some unscrupulous elements were creating confusion regarding announcements and circulars. It had cautioned banks and people to trust only official communication.
Quite an irony, then, that at this moment there’s nothing more confusing perhaps than RBI’s official communication.
Previous:I’m Sticking with My President
As Long As It Was Deep by The Paris ReviewIf You See Wordsworth at the Side of the Road by Eric G. WilsonOpen Sesame by Joshua CohenWhat Would Happen if the Three Jonathans Rewrote Mitt Romney? by Alexander AcimanHow to Live with an Idiot by Sadie SteinMagic Hour: An Interview with Gregory Crewdson by Elisabeth DonnellyCircus and the City: New York, 1793–2010 by John ReedWill Oldham on Bonnie “Prince” Billy by Alan LichtCrumb on Bukowski, Rushdie on James by Sadie SteinSwimming Upstream: A Memoir in Pools by Nathan DeuelThe Mo Yan Culture Experience Zone, and Other News by Sadie SteinWild Cats and Meadowlarks: Creating in L.A. by Alex MooreIn Search of Lost Time by Anna WienerHousesitting, Ghostwriting, and Other Masks by Michael McGrathCircus and the City: New York, 1793–2010 by John ReedSee You There: The Paris Review in L.A. by Sadie SteinMarilyn’s Books, Hemingway’s Vacation by Sadie SteinEdward Lear’s Cat by Sadie SteinDrink the Water by Alia AkkamMimes, Tattoos, and Whales by Sadie Stein How to deal with anger: 7 coping skills to try Seth Rogen's 'An American Pickle' is a sweet story with a sour center: Review Facebook not happy Apple is forcing Gaming to launch on iOS without games It’s time for Twitter to ban Donald Trump Misinformation spreads about Russia connection to antifa.com Woman briefly trapped in garage with a huge bear xHamster's new sex doll is based on what its biggest users want in a woman A very good dog got a round of applause after interrupting a symphony Apple reportedly taking on Peloton, Nike with online exercise classes The hottest U.S. city, Phoenix, just broke an intense heat record Facebook's new policy bans blackface and some Jewish stereotypes Facebook just banned one of its biggest QAnon groups Lost dogs return home after family cooks sausages Piers Morgan gets absolutely owned by co Lyft is quickly catching up to Uber in an important way Facebook internal investigation finds millions of members in QAnon groups No, this doesn't mean that Joe Biden owns antifa.com 'Avatar: The Last Airbender' creators exit live TikTok reportedly set to sue Trump administration as early as Tuesday Notorious crow single
2.6718s , 8223.0234375 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Watch Internal Affairs Online】,Prosperous Times Information Network