Selfie with a currency note is a thing now in India,
and you’re going to see a lot of it in the next few days. Millions
of Indians are taking a break today from their office to visit banks and
exchange the recently withdrawn currency notes with new bills that have gone
into circulation from today. Naturally, many are taking a selfie with the new
notes hey you don’t get new currency
notes in the country everyday. Banks across the country have
hundreds of people, in some places, queued outside today. People formed lines
hours before the bank had opened. The rush comes as people run out of cash and
take immediate actions to deposit the now-withdrawn currency notes.
In a surprise announcement earlier this week, Prime
Minister Narendra Modi announced that the government is scrapping currency
notes in Rs 500 and Rs 1,000 denominations. At the time, these were the biggest
denomination currency notes in India and with massive penetration in the
market. According to Reserve Bank of India, more than 80 percent of currency in
circulation by value in 2014-15 were Rs 500 and Rs 1,000 notes.
The government also announced that banks will remain
closed on Wednesday, sending a panic to hundreds of millions of Indians who
rushed at ATM (instant money machine) at night in hope to get some cash out.
The move comes as the Indian government bolsters its attempts to curb black
money, counterfeit, corruption, and several terrorism activities that often
involve stash of unreported cash.
Though the general consensus among many is that this
move has the potential to curb corruption, it also quickly became apparent that
lives of hundreds of millions of people with low to mid-level income was to be
severely impacted for the next few weeks as they struggle to get access to
cash.
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