Keep up promise of Rs. 24,000 weekly withdrawal, SC tells govt.

Bench asks government to be transparent about cash crunch and, if needed, fix a lower withdrawal limit.

December 09, 2016 05:14 pm | Updated November 17, 2021 07:24 am IST - NEW DELHI

At Bank of Baroda Vastral Branch, Ahmedabad, a black board announces there is no cash in the bank.

At Bank of Baroda Vastral Branch, Ahmedabad, a black board announces there is no cash in the bank.

If the government has assured people they can withdraw Rs. 24,000 of their own legitimate and taxed money a week from the bank, it should stick to its promise and ensure that a system is in place, the Supreme Court told the Centre on Friday.

“You yourself said withdrawals can be up to Rs. 24,000 a week. This is the limit you have prescribed. Can you assure us that banks will not deny people this amount... Once you say people can withdraw Rs. 24,000, that promise must be kept,” Chief Justice of India T.S. Thakur addressed Attorney-General Mukul Rohatgi, appearing for the Centre.

The Bench, also comprising Justices A.M. Khanwilkar and D.Y. Chandrachud, said if there is a cash crunch post-demonetisation, the government should be transparent about it and fix a lower cap for withdrawal.

“People are going to the banks for Rs. 24,000 and they are paid Rs. 2,000, Rs. 5,000 or Rs. 8,000. Fix a cap of at least Rs. 10,000,” Chief Justice Thakur said, identifying this as an immediate measure the government should take care of to alleviate public suffering.

 

Senior advocate P. Chidambaram pointed out that “each bank has its own rule about the amount that can be withdrawn.”

“How can a family live on Rs. 2,000 in a place like Delhi? There should be no discrimination," Mr. Chidambaram argued.

Mr. Rohatgi countered that each member of a family can withdraw up to Rs. 24,000 a week. “How much more does a family need to spend in a week?” he asked.

“Not every member of a family will have a bank account. There may be cases of one bank account operated by a family of five. Banks run dry in half a day. Only 35 per cent ATMs have some money. In the seven Northeastern States, there only some 5000 odd ATMs... a poor family must be allowed to withdraw it's own money,” Mr. Chidambaram pointed out.

At one point, Mr. Rohatgi asked who were the "poor people" who had come to court against demonetisation. He said the PILs heard were those filed by lawyers and district co-operative societies.

He denied submissions that 91 people died in the aftermath of demonetisation.

“Ninety-one deaths do not occur when people do not have money,” Mr. Rohatgi claimed.

Noting that the new Rs. 2000 bank notes look like “Monopoly money,” Mr. Chidambaram submitted that the demonetised Rs. 500 and Rs. 1000 notes approximately worth Rs. 12 lakh crore were physically deposited back into the banking system. However, in contrast, only Rs. 3 lakh crore new notes are in circulation.

"So there is no option for the government but to ration money," Mr. Chidambaram said.

He said there are four Prints — two owned by the RBI and two by the government — churning out a capacity Rs. 3 crore new notes a month.

"Note-for-note replacement will take at least six months," he submitted.

"There is no black money in the hands of the daily wage labourer. How do they survive? The court has to address this issue immediately. Banks say they have no cash. How can the government restrict the legitimate withdrawal of legitimate money... This is plain breach of trust," senior advocate Kapil Sibal submitted.

"You know there is no money... There are limitations to cash disbursal now," Mr. Rohatgi intervened.

"Then your actions are unreasonable," Mr. Sibal retorted.

At this point, the court asked Mr. Rohatgi whether the "expectations" from the demonetisation exercise were ever put on record somewhere.

"Was there any application of mind as to how much money will come in and how much you need to print? Was there a plan or was it done on an impulse?" Chief Justice Thakur asked Mr. Rohatgi.

"Of course, there was a plan. Our expectation was that Rs. 10 to 11 lakh crore to come into the system... now it has been reduced to a trickle," Mr. Rohatgi replied.

 

Similarly, the court asked the government why it was not allowing the district central co-operative banks from taking deposits.

The government has maintained that the co-operative banks had lax system to check the inflow of counterfeit currency. "We are not willing to relax in the case of co-operative banks," Mr. Rohatgi submitted. He said the accounts in these banks are held by societies run by suspect managements

"It is one thing to completely stop something, it is another to intelligently control it. You have, we believe, very capable officials who can devise a mechanism. After all, if you could embark on such a large demonetisation scheme, you can see to these small matters," Chief Justice Thakur told Mr. Rohatgi.

Mr. Chidambaram said the district co-operative banks were the lynchpin of the co-operative sector. He said 97 per cent of the individual and group accounts in them had KYC.

Mr. Sibal said the district co-operative banks in Kerala alone had 60 lakh customers and without deposits and frozen withdrawals, the entire banking system would "go under".

Noting that digital mode of transactions envisaged by the government would take time, the court asked the government to immediately resolve the issues of restriction in withdrawal of money and save district co-operative banks from post-demonetisation collapse.

The court has scheduled a hearing on December 14.

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