Govt receives Rs 14 lakh crore in old notes, post demonetisation. This was unexpected
Dec 28, 2016, 16:13 IST
Post demonetisation, out of the Rs 15.4 lakh crore worth of Rs 500 and Rs 1,000 notes that were scrapped, as much as Rs 14 lakh crore has been deposited in banks.
The value exceeded the expectations as it was expected that as much as Rs 3 lakh crore will not be returned as this would be part of black money hoards.
This also means that expectation that RBI will be able to give a substantial dividend to the government will be belied.
While the value of deposits indicates that ways were found to deposit unaccounted money, the government is expecting to gain tax revenues from large deposits above the prescribed Rs 2.5 lakh per individual limit.
Also, the government is also seeing gains from small savings that were kept in households being deposited in bank accounts that make these funds productive and safe.
The government has announced a scheme that provides for a 50% penalty for voluntary disclosure of deposits in excess of allowed limits with 25% of the funds to be placed in a fund for welfare of the poor for four years.
Officials said the government expected that such diclosures will also add to revenues even as money became available for more productive use, eventually leading to cheaper funds.
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The value exceeded the expectations as it was expected that as much as Rs 3 lakh crore will not be returned as this would be part of black money hoards.
This also means that expectation that RBI will be able to give a substantial dividend to the government will be belied.
While the value of deposits indicates that ways were found to deposit unaccounted money, the government is expecting to gain tax revenues from large deposits above the prescribed Rs 2.5 lakh per individual limit.
Also, the government is also seeing gains from small savings that were kept in households being deposited in bank accounts that make these funds productive and safe.
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Officials said the government expected that such diclosures will also add to revenues even as money became available for more productive use, eventually leading to cheaper funds.