VIII - CURRENCY MANAGEMENT
Under the clean note policy, the Reserve Bank endeavours to ensure a steady supply of fresh banknotes. During
2011-12, the Reserve Bank continued with its efforts to strengthen the security features of banknotes and increase
public awareness so as to address the challenge of counterfeit notes. While the Indian currency acquired a unique
symbol (`) of its own in 2010 and thus acquired a place in the select club of countries with a symbol for their
currency, a further step was taken during 2011-12 by incorporating this symbol on banknotes and coins.
VIII.1 The Reserve Bank is the sole authority to
issue banknotes in India. Although one rupee notes
and coins of all denominations are issued by the
government, they are put into circulation only
through the Reserve Bank. Despite increasing
spread of technology-driven non-cash modes of
payment, the demand for banknotes and coins
continues to rise. The Reserve Bank, in pursuing
its clean note policy, endeavours to ensure a steady
supply of fresh banknotes. It also continues with
efforts to strengthen the security features of
banknotes and increase public awareness so as to
address the challenge of counterfeit notes. Recently,
the unique symbol (`) of the Indian currency was
incorporated on banknotes and coins.
VIII.2 The challenges faced by the Reserve Bank
in its currency operations include ensuring
availability of adequate quantity of banknotes and
coins in the system, ensuring a better quality of
banknotes and ascertaining their genuineness. In
keeping with the same, suitable steps were taken
in 2011-12. Soiled and unfit banknotes were
shredded and briquetted and hence removed from
circulation. To ensure that only genuine banknotes
were put into circulation, high priority continued to
be accorded to prevention and detection of
counterfeit notes in the banking system. Towards
this end, banks were directed to enhance the use
of technology. Further, the process of upgrading
the security features of the banknotes was pursued
with renewed vigour. Again, so as to encourage
reporting of counterfeit notes, conscious efforts
were made to simplify the administrative and legal procedures. The Reserve Bank has also been
examining various options to enhance the life of
banknotes as part of its clean note policy.
BANKNOTES IN CIRCULATION
VIII.3 At 12.5 per cent, the growth in value of
banknotes outpaced the growth in volume terms
(7.4 per cent) in 2011-12. Notes of denomination
500 and 1000 together accounted for 82 per cent
of the total value of banknotes in circulation
(Table VIII.1).
COINS IN CIRCULATION
VIII.4 The Coinage Act, 2011 was passed by the
Parliament and became effective from March 28,
2012. It replaced the Coinage Act, 1906. The Act
has re-defined the legal tender character of coins
as: (i) `1 and above – up to a sum of `1000, and
(ii) 50 paise – up to a sum of `10. Besides
consolidating the laws relating to coinage and the
Mints, the Act prohibits and imposes a penalty on
the melting or destruction of coins, unlawful making,
and issue or possession of metal pieces to be used
as money.
VIII.5 There was a marked decline in the volume
and value of small coins in circulation in 2011-12
as coins of denomination of 25 paise and below
ceased to be legal tender from June 30, 2011 (Table
VIII.2). The supply of coins responded to the
increase in demand from the public during 2011-12
(Box VIII.1). The demand was greater from the new
sources of coin usage such as toll plazas, malls,
Delhi Metro Rail, etc. In the wake of increasing
numbers of complaints from various trade bodies and members of the public on unavailability of coins,
the government has constituted a Committee (Chairman: Dr. K.C. Chakrabarty, Deputy Governor,
Reserve Bank) to examine the issues relating to
the increase in demand for coins and supply/
distribution bottlenecks.
Table VIII.1: Banknotes in Circulation (As at end-March) |
Denomination |
Volume (Million pieces) |
Value (` billion) |
2010 |
2011 |
2012 |
2010 |
2011 |
2012 |
1 |
2 |
3 |
4 |
5 |
6 |
7 |
`2 and |
7,953 |
11,116 |
11,540 |
29 |
43 |
45 |
`5 |
(14.1) |
(17.2) |
(16.2) |
(0.4) |
(0.5) |
(0.4) |
`10 |
18,536 |
21,288 |
23,002 |
185 |
213 |
230 |
|
(32.8) |
(33.0) |
(32.2) |
(2.4) |
(2.3) |
(1.9) |
`20 |
2,341 |
3,020 |
3,510 |
47 |
60 |
70 |
|
(4.1) |
(4.7) |
(4.9) |
(0.6) |
(0.7) |
(0.6) |
`50 |
4,211 |
3196 |
3,488 |
211 |
160 |
174 |
|
(7.4) |
(5.0) |
(4.9) |
(2.7) |
(1.7) |
(1.4) |
`100 |
13,836 |
14024 |
14,119 |
1,384 |
1,402 |
1,412 |
|
(24.5) |
(21.7) |
(19.8) |
(17.6) |
(15.0) |
(11.6) |
`500 |
7,290 |
8,906 |
10,256 |
3,645 |
4,453 |
5,128 |
|
(12.9) |
(13.8) |
(14.8) |
(46.2) |
(47.6) |
(48.7) |
`1,000 |
2,383 |
3027 |
3,469 |
2,382 |
3,027 |
3,469 |
|
(4.2) |
(4.7) |
(5.0) |
(30.2) |
(32.4) |
(32.9) |
Total |
56,549 |
64,577 |
69,382 |
7,883 |
9,358 |
10,528 |
Note: Figures in parentheses represent per cent share in total. |
Table VIII.2: Coins in Circulation (As at end-March) |
Denomination |
Volume (Million pieces) |
Value (` billion) |
2010 |
2011 |
2012 |
2010 |
2011 |
2012 |
1 |
2 |
3 |
4 |
5 |
6 |
7 |
Small |
54,738 |
54,797 |
14,785 |
15 |
15 |
7 |
coin |
(52.0) |
(48.8) |
(18.9) |
(13.1) |
(11.5) |
(5.5) |
`1 |
29,461 |
32,675 |
34,414 |
30 |
33 |
34 |
|
(28.0) |
(29.1) |
(44.1) |
(26.8) |
(25.9) |
(25.6) |
`2 |
13,198 |
15,342 |
18,201 |
26 |
31 |
36 |
|
(12.5) |
(13.7) |
(23.3) |
(23.8) |
(24.3) |
(27.1) |
`5 |
7,760 |
9,070 |
9,981 |
39 |
45 |
50 |
|
(7.4) |
(8.1) |
(12.8) |
(35.0) |
(35.9) |
(37.1) |
`10 |
149 |
300 |
648 |
1 |
3 |
6 |
|
(0.0) |
(0.0) |
(0.8) |
(1.3) |
(2.4) |
(4.8) |
Total |
1,05,306 |
1,12,184 |
78,029 |
111 |
127 |
135 |
Note: Figures in parentheses represent per cent to total. |
Box VIII.1
Demand for Coins
As complaints from the public mounted regarding nonavailability
of coins during 2011-12, the Reserve Bank
undertook a quick survey to understand the usage of coins,
market practices, circulation of coins, etc. The survey
was conducted in February 2012 in twelve cities, viz.,
Mumbai, Delhi, Kolkata, Chennai, Bangalore, Lucknow,
Ahmedabad, Dehradun, Ranchi, Jamnagar, Jabalpur and
Mandya covering 1200 respondents (100 from each city).
The respondents were classified into two major segments,
viz., general public (60 per cent of the respondents) and
traders (40 per cent) and were chosen from different trading/
occupational categories.
In order to assess the availability of coins, the respondents
were asked about the difficulty experienced in obtaining
coins and the stock of coins with them. The respondents were
also asked how often in the past month during a transaction
they had faced a situation where neither the buyer nor the
seller had the coins required for the transaction. The salient
findings of the survey based on sample estimates are as
follows:
-
The per capita average stock of coins with the general
public is 40 pieces, of which 34 pieces (88 per cent) are `1, `2 and `5 coins. However, nearly 40 per cent of the
general public has a stock of only 10 coins or less.
-
Although traders keep a higher average stock of 173
pieces, of which 153 pieces are `1, `2 and `5 coins, the
bottom 56 per cent traders have a stock of 40 coins or
less.
-
Majority of the respondents reported `1 (44 per cent)
and `5 (34 per cent) coins as the most needed coins.
-
About 77 per cent of the general public and 69 per cent
of traders reported that counter-party transactions were
the main source of coins. The other source of coins is
commission agents.
-
Only 3 per cent of the general public and 4 per cent of
traders reported banks as a source of coins. Only 8 per
cent of the respondents reported having approached
banks for coins in the past one month. The survey also
found that most of the people (about 84 per cent) did not
deposit coins in banks.
-
The segment of general public having a stock of at least
40 coins reported less than 20 per cent instances of a
shortage situation.
-
In the case of traders, the relationship between the
stock of coins and the incidence of coin shortage was
not well established.
-
Nearly 56 per cent of respondents reported difficulty
in giving correct coin change as coins are not easily
available from any source. Another 27 per cent cited
reasons such as not wanting to carry coins, while
another 11 per cent did not want to spend time in
selecting, counting and giving exact change. The
remaining 6 per cent reported that shopkeepers did not
accept small coins as change.
-
About 44 per cent of the respondents reported that
shopkeepers gave some items as a substitute for coins.
As this survey was in the nature of a quick assessment, the
survey results may be subject to sampling errors arising from
small sample size and purposive sampling, recall ability of
the respondents and accuracy of the information given by
the respondents. However, it has provided pointers to better
addressing the demand for coins from the public.
CURRENCY OPERATIONS
Infrastructure for Currency Management
VIII.6 The Reserve Bank carries out the issue of
notes and management of currency through its 18
issue offices, one sub-office at Lucknow, a currency
chest at Kochi and a wide network of 4,221 currency
chests and 4,018 small coin depots. There is an
agency agreement with SCBs, under which the
currency chest facility is granted to them. Currency
chests with sub-treasury offices are being gradually
phased out and their number reduced to 11 during
2011-12. During the year a revised agreement was
entered into with the banks maintaining currency
chests that inter-alia stipulates various services to
be provided to the public/linked bank branches and
the Reserve Bank’s right to take penal action in
case poor conduct of this function was observed/
reported. The State Bank and its associates have
the largest share (70 per cent) of currency chests followed by nationalised banks (27 per cent)
(Table VIII.3).
Table VIII.3: Currency Chests and Small Coin Depots as at end-December 2011 |
Category |
No. of Currency Chests |
No. of Small Coin Depots |
1 |
2 |
3 |
Treasuries |
11 |
- |
State Bank of India |
2,192 |
2,118 |
State Bank Associate Banks |
778 |
775 |
Nationalised Banks |
1,124 |
1,009 |
Private Sector Banks |
107 |
107 |
Co-operative Banks |
1 |
1 |
Regional Rural Banks |
3 |
3 |
Foreign Banks |
5 |
5 |
Total |
4,221 |
4,018 |
VIII.7 The Monetary Policy Statement for 2012-13
announced that the distribution of bank notes and
coins would be channelised only through currency
chests/bank branches, thus bringing the related
services closer to customers. Banks are expected
to strengthen their distribution systems and
procedures so as to cater to the growing needs of
the common man.
CLEAN NOTE POLICY
Indent (Order for) and Supply of Fresh Banknotes
and Coins
VIII.8 The note printing presses supplied almost
100 per cent of the indented banknotes for
2011-12. The total supply of notes in volume terms
increased by 6.3 per cent in 2011-12 (Tables VIII.4 and VIII.5).
Table VIII.4: Indent and Supply of Banknotes (April-March) |
Volume (Million pieces) |
Denomination |
2010-11 |
2011-12 |
2012-13 P Indent |
Indent |
Supply |
Indent |
Supply |
1 |
2 |
3 |
4 |
5 |
6 |
`5 |
- |
674 |
- |
2 |
- |
`10 |
5,000 |
5,143 |
5,700 |
6,252 |
5,400 |
`20 |
1,500 |
1,104 |
600 |
1,045 |
800 |
`50 |
2,000 |
1,602 |
1,200 |
949 |
1,500 |
`100 |
4,300 |
3,420 |
6,100 |
5,079 |
6,100 |
`500 |
4,000 |
4,130 |
2,000 |
2,330 |
2,500 |
`1,000 |
1,000 |
467 |
2,000 |
1,927 |
1,000 |
Total |
17,800 |
16,540 |
17,600 |
17,584 |
17,300 |
P: Provisional. |
Table VIII.5: Indent and Supply of Coins |
Denomination |
Volume (Million pieces) |
2010-11 |
2011-12 |
2012-13 P |
Indent |
Supply |
Indent |
Supply |
Indent |
1 |
2 |
3 |
4 |
5 |
6 |
50 paise |
70 |
59 |
70 |
107 |
50 |
`1 |
2,600 |
2,746 |
1,600 |
1,480 |
1,550 |
`2 |
1,700 |
1,811 |
2,900 |
3,343 |
3,200 |
`5 |
1,300 |
1,292 |
800 |
761 |
850 |
`10 |
1,000 |
232 |
1,000 |
403 |
1,000 |
Total |
6,670 |
6,140 |
6,370 |
6,094 |
6,650 |
P: Provisional. |
Disposal of Soiled Banknotes
VIII.9 During 2011-12, 13.8 billion pieces of soiled
banknotes (21.3 per cent of the total in circulation
as on March 31, 2011) were processed and
removed from circulation (Table VIII.6). Of this, 8.5
billion pieces were processed through 59 Currency
Verification and Processing Systems (CVPS). The
remaining banknotes were disposed under other
modes. The number of banknotes withdrawn from
circulation and eventually disposed at the Reserve
Bank offices was almost same as the previous year,
in line with the ongoing efforts for speedier removal
of soiled banknotes from currency chests and
augmenting the disposal at Reserve Bank offices.
Table VIII.6: Disposal of Soiled Banknotes and
Supply of Fresh Banknotes
(Million pieces) |
Denomination |
April-March |
2009-10 |
2010-11 |
2011-12 |
Disposal |
Supply |
Disposal |
Supply |
Disposal |
Supply |
1 |
2 |
3 |
4 |
5 |
6 |
7 |
`1,000 |
78 |
865 |
179 |
706 |
375 |
1,440 |
`500 |
1,247 |
3,513 |
1,864 |
4,347 |
1,994 |
5,560 |
`100 |
4,307 |
3,935 |
5,227 |
4,085 |
5,577 |
1,091 |
`50 |
2,400 |
791 |
2,095 |
1,114 |
1,578 |
1,522 |
`20 |
790 |
467 |
664 |
1,296 |
562 |
4,237 |
`10 |
3,832 |
4,975 |
3,657 |
5,580 |
3,584 |
3,379 |
Up to `5 |
418 |
441 |
166 |
549 |
101 |
371 |
Total |
13,072 |
14,987 |
13,852 |
17,677 |
13,772 |
17,600 |
Measures to Improve the Quality of Banknotes
in Circulation
VIII.10 Banks have been advised to ensure that all
notes received by them are processed on note
sorting machines (NSMs) before being re-issued
to the public. Further, notes in the denomination of
`100 and above are to be processed through
machines conforming to the “note authentication
and fitness sorting parameters” prescribed by the
Reserve Bank, before being issued over the counter
or through ATMs. Bank branches with average daily
cash receipts of `5 million were advised to use such
machines by end-March 2011. During 2011-12,
banks were further directed to cover every single
branch of SCBs including RRBs to ensure
compliance.
VIII.11 As on December 31, 2011, banks had
installed 10,394 NSMs. Further, banks had also
made arrangements for issue of machine processed
notes in other 1,706 branches. The above measure,
besides promoting efficient banknote sorting,
provides an impetus to both the clean note policy
and the detection of counterfeit notes.
COUNTERFEIT BANKNOTES
VIII.12 Due to higher awareness and use of NSMs,
the number of counterfeit banknotes detected has
been increasing. Reflecting the increased use of
NSMs, bank branches accounted for almost 93 per
cent of the total counterfeit notes detected in
2011-12 (Table VIII.7).
Table VIII.7: Counterfeit Notes Detected (No. of Pieces) |
Year |
Detection at |
Total |
Reserve Bank |
Other banks |
1 |
2 |
3 |
|
2009-10 |
52,620 |
3,48,856 |
4,01,476 |
|
(13.1) |
(86.9) |
|
2010-11 |
45,235 |
3,90,372 |
4,35,607 |
|
(10.4) |
(89.6) |
|
2011-12 |
37,690 |
4,83,465 |
5,21,155 |
|
(7.2) |
(92.8) |
|
Note: Figures in parentheses represent the per centshare in total. |
VIII.13 During 2011-12, banks were instructed to
stop re-issue of banknotes of `1,000 denomination
of the Mahatma Gandhi Series 2000 and `100
denomination of the Mahatma Gandhi Series 1996
in a prompt, smooth and non-disruptive manner
without any inconvenience to the public. Such
banknotes, however, continued to be legal tender
and acceptable for all transactions and no member
of the public was denied exchange facility. Further,
in order to ensure that all cases of detection of
counterfeit notes at the bank branches/treasuries
were promptly reported to the police authorities, it
was decided to revise the procedure to be followed
on detection of counterfeit banknotes at bank
branches, treasuries and sub-treasuries. The
Reserve Bank, in co-ordination with the central
government, has been pursuing with all state
governments to nominate a nodal police station in
every district for the purpose of reporting the
detection of counterfeit notes. Further, banks and
treasuries were advised that: (i) for cases of
detection of counterfeit notes up to four pieces, in
a single transaction, a consolidated report in the
prescribed format should be sent to the police
authorities at the end of the month; and (ii) for cases
of detection of counterfeit notes of five or more
pieces, in a single transaction, FIR should be
lodged with the nodal police station/police authorities
as per jurisdiction.
EXPENDITURE ON SECURITY PRINTING
AND DISTRIBUTION
VIII.14 The expenditure incurred on security
printing charges (note forms) in 2011-12 (July-June)
increased by `3.3 billion (13.8 per cent) mainly on
account of an increase in the supply of banknotes
compared to the previous year (Chart VIII.1 and
Table VIII.4). Expenditure on remittance of treasure
has increased from `455 million in 2010-11 (July–
June) to `528 million in 2011-12 mainly due to the
increased supply of banknotes/coins to the currency
chests.
VIII.15 Abiding by the Reserve Bank’s directives,
banks exercise adequate caution while processing banknotes so as to ensure that the banking channel
is not used as a conduit for circulation of counterfeit
notes. With the increasing incidence of counterfeit
notes, the need for adequately trained personnel
at banks to identify such notes has increased
manifold. Trained personnel to man the counters is
not only important for the detection/identification of
counterfeit notes but can also serve as a point of
awareness for members of the public. While the
Reserve Bank and banks have been conducting
training programmes, in the emergent scenario
these may not be adequate. It was therefore
proposed that the Indian Banks Association (IBA),
in consultation with the banks should ensure that
all bank personnel handling cash are trained on
features of genuine Indian banknotes, with the
objective to train all such personnel within three
years. The Reserve Bank will also provide faculty
support and training material.
|
VIII.16 In order to align the currency management
systems with the emerging needs of the time and
leveraging technology, the critical areas of
operational importance have been revisited. A
roadmap has been prepared to realign its business
processes for greater efficiency and productivity. |