During a day-long meeting of RJD MPs, ministers, legislators and office-bearers, Prasad and other leaders of the party highlighted people's woes following the scrapping of Rs 1,000 and Rs 500 notes.
Addressing the RJD leaders, Prasad criticised the move and said, "It will meet the fate of 'nasbandi' (forced sterlisation) during the Congress rule in the past."
Prasad and his party have been on the forefront of protest against the demonetisation decision inside and outside Parliament.
Asked how he saw Nitish Kumar getting praise from Centre on demonetisation, Prasad, whose RJD is a partner in the grand alliance government, said, "Nitish Kumar's approach is similar to our's...All of us are standing together against hardship caused to masses due to high-value currency invalidation."
Nitish Kumar and his party JD(U), which has supported demonetisation, had kept away from Banerjee's demonstration.
Economist Mohan Guruswamy, who was advisor in the NDA government of Atal Bihari Vajpayee, was also invited to speak on adverse impact of demonetisation.
In the meeting Prasad, Tejaswi Yadav, Abdul Bari Siddiqui, who is the finance minister in the Nitish Kumar government, and a host of senior leaders spke on the woes of poor people and farmers standing outside banks and ATMs for withdrawal of cash.
Prasad said, "After the December-28 dharna, leaders of all the parties, national as well regional, would be invited to a rally later in Patna."
chief said "after seeing that demonetisation is failing, the PM has shifted the issue now and is talking about cashless, PayTm."
"On the one hand the PM talks of going ahead of China and on the another hand he is favouring a company (PayTm) in which the Chinese have a major share," he said.
During over half-an-hour of presentation, Guruswamy said though former Prime Minister Manmohan Singh had predicted a fall of two per cent in the GDP due to demonetisation, his view is that the decline would amount to about 2.5 per cent by the end of the financial year.
He said of the total amount of unaccounted money, only 4 per cent is in the form of cash while major chunk of 46 per cent is invested in land and building, 26 per cent in jewellery and 24 per cent is parked abroad.
"Modi is after only this 4 per cent of the black money which is in the form of cash which could not bear any result other than causing miseries to common people, especially the daily wagers," he added.
"Approximately Rs 30 crore of black money is expected to be unearthed through the demonetisation. A total of Rs 42,000 crore would be spent in reprinting this volume of scrapped notes," Guruswamy, who taught Economics at Harvard University, said.
