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Rs 1,000 notes may make a comeback in new avatar with better security


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The Reserve Bank of India last week launched the bright yellow Rs 200 denomination notes

A man shows new currency notes of Rs 200 and Rs 50 outside the Reserve Bank of India in New Delhi on Friday.This is the first time that Rs 200 banknotes were introduced in India. Photo: PTI

 

The Rs 1,000-denomination note may be making comeback after its legal tender status was withdrawn in the demonetisation measure announced on November 8 last year. According to a source-based DNA report, the government will soon start printing the new Rs 1,000 notes with enhanced security features as compared to its predecessor. 

 

Citing a person close to the development, the report said that work on the design and paper for printing the new Rs 1,000 notes was in full swing and that they could be out and in your wallets as soon as December this year. The person told the news agency that the Mysore and Salboni printing presses were getting ready to print the new currency notes. 

 

Why bring back the Rs 1,000 note?

 

An unnamed banker explained the rationale behind the move, telling DNA that the new Rs 1,000 notes were meant to bridge the gap between the current Rs 500 and Rs 2,000 notes.   The source added that the Rs 2,000 note would continue to exist.   

 

Focus on lower value denominations clear

 

Reserve Bank of India (RBI) last week launched the bright yellow Rs 200 denomination notes and said it would shortly ramp up the supply of the new currency note across the country.

 

Long queues of people were witnessed at RBI offices on Friday to get the new Rs 200 currency note that has been introduced for the first time by the central bank.

 

The RBI has launched the Rs 200 note with an aim to make it easier for the common man to transact in lower denomination currencies.

 

These notes are available only through "select RBI offices and banks as is normal when a new denomination of notes is introduced and the supply increases gradually," the RBI had said in a release.

 

The production of these notes is being "ramped up by the currency printing presses, and over time as more notes are printed, it will be distributed across the country through the banking channels and will be available for public in adequate quantity", the release said.

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Reserve Bank of India to launch new Rs 1000 banknote by December

 

The Rs 1,000-denominated currency note, which was demonetized on November 8 last year, is coming back in a new avatar with enhanced security features.

Sources told DNA Money that the government would shortly start printing the new Rs 1,000 note to bridge the yawning gap between the existing Rs 500 and Rs 2,000 notes.

Preparations for the design and the paper for printing the Rs 1,000 note are in full swing. The new currency note with enhanced security features could be out as early as December 2017, said a person close to the development.

"The printing presses at Mysore and Salboni are getting ready to print the brand-new Rs 1,000 notes which will have enhanced security features," the person said.

"Printing of Rs 2,000-denominated notes stopped at least six months back and now the Rs 200 notes are getting printed at these presses. Next in line for printing is the Rs 1,000 note," the person added.

The Rs 1,000 note will ease day-to-day operations and be beneficial to the common man, especially in the rural and semi-urban areas which are dominated by low-value transactions.

India currently has currency denominations of Re 1, Rs 2, Rs 5, Rs 10, Rs 20, Rs 100, Rs 500 and Rs 2,000. While Rs 200 notes are being introduced to bridge the link between the Rs 100 and Rs 500 value notes, Rs 1,000 is set to narrow the wide gulf between the Rs 500- and Rs 2,000-denominated notes.

Globally, countries have opted to use the Renard series for convenient use of currency. In this system, the ratio between adjacent denomination of currencies is 1:2 or 1:2.5. This means the denomination should be twice or two-and-half times of its preceding denomination. Such a ratio allows exchange of value ordinarily in a maximum of three denominations.

India already had Rs 1,000 currency notes, which was demonetized on November 8, 2016. The new Rs 1,000 notes will have improved security features compared to the extinguished Rs 1000 notes.

"The Rs 2,000 note will continue to exist but the focus will be on the lower-denomination notes. The Rs 2,000 note was printed for faster remonetization but in hindsight, the government has realised that lower value denominations should be the focus," the source said.

"The new Rs 1,000 note will bridge missing link between the existing Rs 2,000 and Rs 500. Right now, the next denomination after Rs 500 is Rs 2,000 which creates a big gap impacting the ease of transactions," a banker said.

RBI on August 25 released both the Rs 200 and Rs 50 notes. The existing Rs 50 that is already in circulation will continue to be in circulation along with the new notes that come with enhanced security features. However, ATMs will not dispense these new notes due to their size unless the machines and their cassettes are recalibrated. The new Rs 200 denomination has the motif of Sanchi Stupa on the reverse and its base colour is bright yellow while the Rs 50 note is fluorescent blue and has the stone chariot of Hampi, which is internationally recognised as the world heritage site by the Unesco.

Analysis

The printing presses at Mysore and Salboni are getting ready to print the new Rs 1,000 notes, sources said

Printing of Rs 2,000 notes stopped six months ago. Now Rs 200 notes are getting printed at these presses. Next in line are Rs 1,000 notes

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