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HomeNewsBusinessMC Investigation| Outside RBI’s Delhi office, middlemen seek Rs 400 cut to exchange Rs 2000 note

MC Investigation| Outside RBI’s Delhi office, middlemen seek Rs 400 cut to exchange Rs 2000 note

The Rs 2000 note had been introduced in 2016 in an effort to rapidly remonetise the economy after Prime Minister Narendra Modi announced that the high-denomination Rs 500 and Rs 1000 notes were being withdrawn as part of the fight against black money.

October 31, 2023 / 12:51 IST
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People in queues in front of RBI office in New Delhi

Brazen middlemen, operating right outside the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) office in the National Capital, are making a killing from ‘customers’ seeking to exchange the Rs 2000 notes, charging as much as Rs 400 per bill. The deadline to exchange the withdrawn notes at bank branches ended on October 7, but the facility is still available at RBI offices, which have drawn long queues of people who couldn’t deposit or exchange their notes earlier.

There is a limit of Rs 20,000 per person to exchange these notes.

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Sensing a business opportunity, the interlopers have deployed several people to stand in queues to exchange these notes.  They accept a large quantity of such notes from prospective customers, and pay them the amount out of bags of money ready at hand after deducting Rs 300-400 per note. Customers who don’t want to stand in long queues multiple times don’t mind paying the commission to the middlemen.

A Moneycontrol reporter on the ground encountered several such instances in front of the RBI office in New Delhi.