HomeNewsBusinessEconomyRBI says no shortage of currency, but steps up printing of notes at 4 presses

RBI says no shortage of currency, but steps up printing of notes at 4 presses

Shortage may be felt in some pockets largely due to logistical issues of replenishing ATMs frequently and recalibration of ATMs being still underway, banking regulator says.

April 17, 2018 / 19:49 IST
Story continues below Advertisement
Recap bonds for bank recapitalisation | Acting on its plan announced in October 2017, the central government issued recap bonds worth Rs 88,000 crore in January—the first instalment of committed Rs 2.11 lakh crore. This was prompted by banks that were reeling under NPAs and were short when it came to meeting their capital adequacy and provisioning targets.
Recap bonds for bank recapitalisation | Acting on its plan announced in October 2017, the central government issued recap bonds worth Rs 88,000 crore in January—the first instalment of committed Rs 2.11 lakh crore. This was prompted by banks that were reeling under NPAs and were short when it came to meeting their capital adequacy and provisioning targets.

Beena Parmar Moneycontrol News

Amid news reports of a cash crunch from some parts of the country, Reserve Bank of India (RBI) clarified that there is sufficient cash in RBI vaults and currency chests.

However, with ATMs facing shortage of cash, RBI has ramped up printing of notes in all the four presses, it said.

Story continues below Advertisement

“It has been reported in a section of the media that there is shortage of currency in certain parts of the country. It is clarified at the outset that there is sufficient cash in the RBI vaults and currency chests. Nevertheless, printing of the notes has been ramped up in all the 4 note presses,” RBI said in a statement.

In the last few weeks, many ATMs have gone dry in states including Telangana, Andhra Pradesh, Karnataka, north Bihar, Maharashtra, Madhya Pradesh and parts of Delhi. The government and RBI officials had met and attributed the shortfall to unusual demand for cash in a few states and instructed banks to improve their cash management.