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Parliamentary Panel Quizzes Finance Ministry Officials On Note Ban Impact

Officials have been asked to give their opinion on alternative ways to meet the objectives of demonetisation.

People gathered outside a State Bank of India branch in Mumbai as banks open for exchange of old currency notes. (Photographer: Aditya Mehrotra/BloombergQuint)
People gathered outside a State Bank of India branch in Mumbai as banks open for exchange of old currency notes. (Photographer: Aditya Mehrotra/BloombergQuint)

A parliamentary panel today sought to know from finance ministry officials if the objectives of note ban could have been achieved by other means, and also decided to call representatives of union ministries and states to assess the impact of demonetisation, sources said.

The Parliamentary Standing Committee on Finance, headed by former minister and senior Congress leader M Veerappa Moily, has been looking into the note ban and its impact on the economy.

Economic Affairs Secretary Subhash Chandra Garg, Financial Services Secretary Rajiv Kumar and CBDT Chairman Sushil Chandra today apprised the committee on various aspects of the note ban, sources said.

The ministry officials have been asked to give opinion on alternative ways to meet the objectives of demonetisation, which included checking black money, curbing terror funding and promoting digitalisation of payments.

Members expressed concerns over the impact of demonetisation on 'Brand India' as the country has now ceased to be the world's fastest growing major economy, they said. GDP growth in the first quarter of the fiscal slowed to a three-year low of 5.7 percent.

Sources further said members felt that more inputs were needed to study the impact of demonetisation. It was decided to call representative of various ministries such as agriculture and commerce.

Further, the panel has decided to seek views of state governments on ramifications of note ban. While briefing the panel earlier, RBI Governor Urjit Patel had said the country’s infrastructure is not fully geared for handling digital payments, sources added.