Finance Minister Arun Jaitley attributed the cash shortage to an unusual spurt in demand during the past three months and described it as "temporary", adding that the ATM cash crunch was being "tackled quickly" and that there was "more than adequate" currency in circulation. To fix the ATM cash crunch, the government said that the printing of Rs 500 denomination notes, about 5 billion of which are printed per day, would be increased by five times. Notes worth Rs 700-750 billion (Rs 70,000-75,000 crore) would be printed in a month.
However, what caused the cash crunch and ATMs running dry in the first place? The suspected hoarding of Rs 2,000 notes was cited as one reason by the government. The RBI, for its part, said that logistics and recalibration issues were limiting cash replenishment at ATMs. Further, Finance Minister Jaitley said that the "temporary shortage" was caused by a "sudden and unusual increase (in demand)" in some areas and that it was being "tackled quickly". With the RBI and banks blaming cash management companies for ATMs running dry, ATM industry representatives said that it was the banks that were unable to meet the demand for cash. They said banks had not been able to meet their indent, the daily calculation of cash required, for the past four-five days.
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