"Initially I supported the cause, but when things unfolded, it became clear that the government was absolutely in dark about the magnitude of the challenges being faced by the common man of the country. And now I am of the view that this (demonetisation) has turned into an economic anarchy and total disruption," Mungekar told reporters here.
Mungekar, the former member of the erstwhile Planning Commission, demanded the government should roll back Rs 2,000 notes and speed up printing of Rs 10, 20, 50 and 100 notes so that it can solve the problem of instant scarcity of lower denomination liquidity.
Alleging "greatest blunders" in the drive against the black money, Mungekar, said, "Why is it that nobody from the Ministry or RBI has yet explained the rationale of introducing Rs 2,000 notes. Finance Minister Arun Jaitley must answer this in Parliament tomorrow."
"Rs 2,000 currency notes will facilitate hoardings of black money in the immediate future and facilitate the process of conversion of currency to asset such as gold, diamonds and other assets. The rise in gold price was a live example," the economist said.
Mungekar said, "What the nation immediately needs is a proper action plan to reduce hardship, not empty rhetoric and emotional appeals."
"The government is asking people to bear with it for 50 days. I ask who are these (people), who are standing in the endless queues? They are lower and lower middle class, workers, small retailers. How many of the supposedly black moneyed are seen in these queues," he added.
In a surprise decision last week, the Centre had scrapped currency notes of Rs 1000 and Rs 500.
Disclaimer: No Business Standard Journalist was involved in creation of this content
