"Was this entire exercise done to protect the corporates who are refusing to return the loans they had taken from our nationalised banks? Was this done to prevent the banks from collapsing as a consequence of these loans?" CPI(M) leader Sitaram Yechury asked.
While announcing demonetisation on November 8, 2016, Prime Minister Narendra Modi had stated the move will help combat the problems of corruption, black money, terror funding and counterfeit currency. Yechury claimed that none of these were achieved and instead corruption "has reached hitherto unknown levels".
"M Venkaiah Naidu, when he was a minister, had said demonetisation has short term pain and long term gains. There is absolutely no gain, only pain in both short and long terms," Yechury told reporters here.
Rather, he alleged, it benefited corporates "under the mask of digitisation" and at the cost of common people.
He alleged the move also legitimised counterfeit currency.
"Normally we would demand a white paper. But since this is all about the prime minister's fight against black money, I think there should be a black paper," he added.
The Marxist leader put a 14-point poser to the government, asking it to come clean on it.
He sought to know who decided to undertake demonetisation and who was responsible for the "more than 100 deaths" of people who had queued up outside ATMs/banks to withdraw their money after the note ban
Yechury objected to Modi's picture in print advertisements of a private company after demonetisation was announced and alleged the intention was to give a profit bonanaza to corporates.
Yechury claimed that the informal sector, which employs two-third of India's work force, has "collapsed" because of demonetisation and held the Centre responsible for it.
Similarly, the "ill-effects" of demonetisation on rural markets and agriculture heightened the distress among farmers, he alleged.
Referring to a report by the Centre for Monitoring Indian Economy, Yechury said the informal sector suffered Rs 1.50 lakh crore loss, thereby taking the total "additional expenditure" caused by demonetisation to Rs 2 lakh crore.
"So, we, therefore, want accountability on this to be fixed. Those responsible for this must be punished and all the needle of suspicion points to the prime minister and the prime minister's office. So, issue a black paper and answer all these questions," he said.
Yechury sought to dismiss the government's claim, arguing that since PAN card was used to accept the invalidated Rs 500 and Rs 1000 notes, the returned currency stands legalised.
The CPI's national secretary D Raja echoed Yechury on the issue. He claimed neither the prime minister nor the finance minister minister and the RBI Governor have answers to what happened to achieving the objectives of demonetisation.
He also said that no one knows the quantum of black money unearthed or to what extent the move affected small and medium size businesses and their workforce.
The RBI had yesterday said that as much as 99 per cent of the junked Rs 500 and Rs 1,000 notes have returned to the banking system.
The Reserve Bank, which has so far shied away from disclosing the actual number of junked currency deposited after November 8 last year, said in its annual report for 2016-17 that Rs 15.28 lakh crore of the junked currency had come back into the banking system, leaving only Rs 16,050 crore out.
Disclaimer: No Business Standard Journalist was involved in creation of this content
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