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Modi Plunders India’s Cash. Indians Cheer.

I don't know a single person who is happy about this demonetization business, everyone from paanwaalas and auto drivers to businessmen and housewives are complaining. Everyone has been sending their domestic help to stand in line and convert their money to white, 2.5 L at a time, so "windfall" for some but life thrown out of gear for everyone, no cash/huge lines in ATMs to withdraw a paltry amount.

Shit move by modi, these idiots cheering online are either lying or are government worshiping zombies/operatives who can't think for themselves.
 
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I don't know a single person who is happy about this demonetization business, everyone from paanwaalas and auto drivers to businessmen and housewives are complaining. Everyone has been sending their domestic help to stand in line and convert their money to white, 2.5 L at a time, so "windfall" for some but life thrown out of gear for everyone, no cash/huge lines in ATMs to withdraw a paltry amount.

Shit move by modi, these idiots cheering online are either lying or are government worshiping zombies/operatives who can't think for themselves.


If some unused the money which is not into circulation goes into circulation what happens then ?

I met couple of auto wala they said "I dont get rides for 1000's or 500's . I mostly ferry people from one place to another for 50 to 50rs max".

so yeah i think he is thinking about how to convert his 1000's of 1000 and 500 rupee notes :/
 
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If some unused the money which is not into circulation goes into circulation what happens then ?

I met couple of auto wala they said "I dont get rides for 1000's or 500's . I mostly ferry people from one place to another for 50 to 50rs max".

so yeah i think he is thinking about how to convert his 1000's of 1000 and 500 rupee notes :/
People don't have ready cash, all cash dependent businesses (and there are thousands of them) have been severely negatively impacted by this move, sorry, but there is no way for anyone to put a positive spin on this. Common people from all walks of life are suffering.
 
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Only 4 countries ever did that, USSR after perestroika which is understandable.

Then Zimbabwe and Myanmar. And now India.
All the countries have something in common which is stupidity. And all of them think that the world revolve around them. LOL
 
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Demonetisation Has Wrecked Farmers
BY JAIDEEP HARDIKAR ON 28/11/2016


Farmers in Vidarbha are being forced to incur terrible losses – by accepting lower prices, losing their perishable produce, or due to a fear of depositing cash payments in old notes in banks where they owe loan repayments.

The APMC at Selu. Credit: Jaideep Hardikar

Bandu Ghormade had no choice but to accept the old Rs 500 notes from the procurement agent and a lower price of Rs 200 less for every 40 kilo crate of his freshly harvested eggplants.

“If I didn’t, my produce would have gone to waste,” said the farmer in his late 40s. He grows carrots, spinach, eggplants and okra in Chicholi, about 50 kilometres from Nagpur. “Those who grow grains or cotton can hold on to their crop, I can’t.”

For years, Ghormade would load four quintals (400 kilos) of vegetables on his tempo every morning from October to December, and drive to Nagpur’s state-run Agriculture Produce Market Committee mandi, where licensed traders buy farmers’ produce through agents.

Since November 8, when high-value notes were demonetised, Ghormade has been selling at a loss at the mandi every day, while his son is going to the nearest bank, five kilometres away, to stand in queue and deposit the notes.

Still, Ghormade is earning something because he is ready to accept the old notes. Some farmers, also with perishable produce, are not – and they are making terrible losses.


Chandrabhan Jhode with his spinach crop at the Nagpur APMC: a good monsoon had led to a good harvest this year and the farmers were hoping for decent returns after successive years of drought in many regions of the country. Credit: Jaideep Hardikar

Many farmers have junked their vegetables in the absence of buyers at markets in Thane and Pune,

At the Hiwarkhed village market in Amaravati, about 160 kilometres from Nagpur, orange growers have dumped mounds of the fruit on the roads in protest at the sharp fall in prices.

The prices have fallen because the traders have stopped buying. The traders aren’t buying because most farmers aren’t accepting the old notes.

Is the farmers’ plight solely an inevitable consequence of a poorly planned demonetisation, or are they shooting themselves in the foot by insisting on payments in usable cash?

On Wednesday, November 16, Sudam Pawar, 38, was the lone farmer at the mandi in Selu town in Wardha district, about 70 kilometres from Nagpur, selling his nine quintals of cotton.

The trader offered to transfer the money directly into his bank account. Pawar, former sarpanch of Aamgaon village, agreed. The money got transferred immediately, without any hassles.

Later that day, Pawar said, eight more farmers known to him sold about 80 quintals of cotton at the mandi, accepting the old notes. With hardly any other arrivals, the trader bought their cotton at Rs 5,000 a quintal – a little more than the market price of Rs 4,750-4,900.

So why are more farmers not following their example? Pawar explains.

Most farmers are afraid to put their earnings in their bank accounts because these accounts are in the same banks from where they have taken crop loans. A majority are long-term defaulters because, for years, they haven’t earned enough to repay their loans as well as sustain their families.

Once their earnings go into their accounts, they fear the banks will discourage withdrawals, pressuring them to leave a balance equal to the sum they would need to repay by March to settle their loans. Most farmers know that this would leave them in serious jeopardy.

There’s no government order asking the banks to unilaterally deduct the loan repayment from the farmers’ accounts, but the banks have used pressure tactics in the past, knowing well that the farmers cannot afford to annoy them because they would need a loan the following year too.

“I could accept the money transfer because I don’t have a loan in my name, nor do I need cash urgently,” Pawar said. “Our crop loan is linked to my father’s account, so the bank cannot deduct the repayment amount from my account.”

Nor were the other eight sellers at the mandi in any urgent need of cash, he said. “But most small farmers, who do sustenance farming and have no other income, won’t accept cheques or money transfers.”

§

“Demonetisation has wrecked the farmers,” said Ramkrishna Umathe, farmer and deputy chairman of the Agriculture Produce Market Committee (APMC) mandi at Selu, which serves about 100 villages growing mainly soybean and cotton. “For about a week, sellers and buyers have virtually deserted our market.”


Newly-arrived sacks of soybean at the APMC in Selu town, Wardha district. Credit: Jaideep Hardikar

So the coolies, transporters and other ancillaries too have been without work, assistant market secretary Mahendra Bhandarkar said.

“This is the time of year for brisk sales, but the arrivals have tanked since November 8,” Umathe said on Wednesday.

From 5,000 quintals a day, the arrivals had dropped to zero, he said. “Yesterday, 100 sacks (quintals) came.”

Umathe said the traders were offering cheques and money transfers but the farmers weren’t ready to accept these lest the banks “deduct the crop loan.”.

“Most fields are un-irrigated here; the farmers are already under a lot of financial stress. They have to repay hand loans and the cost of inputs taken on credit, and pay their grocers and farm hands,” Umathe said.

“If there’s some residual money, it gets deposited into the bank – else the bank loans remain unpaid.”

§

Sales – and prices – of produce are falling for another reason too: a drop in consumption in the retail markets. “Forward movements have been affected,” said Rajesh Thakar, a wholesale tomato trader in Nashik.

For instance, orange arrivals at the Nagpur mandi have dried up because of a demonetisation-driven slump in sales at the markets in Kolkata and north India, said Rajesh Chhabrani, a director at the Nagpur APMC and an orange trader himself.

“Orange prices fell 25 to 35% today (Tuesday), from Rs 40,000 to Rs 25-30,000 per tonne,” he said. “Ten to 12 truckloads of oranges left the mandi for Kolkata daily; that has stopped.”

Madhusudan Harane, a director at the APMC in Hinganghat town in Wardha district, said, “Our APMC has been shut since November 8.”

He questioned the timing of the demonetisation. “Some Rs. 1,500 crores worth of annual business took place in our mandi, over half of it between October and December – the peak months for farm markets,” he said.

Ironically, a good monsoon had led to a good harvest this year and the farmers were hoping for good returns after successive years of drought in many regions of the country.

Jaideep Hardikar is a journalist, writer, researcher, cricket enthusiast and a PARI volunteer. He is a special correspondent for central India with ‘The Telegraph’ and author of the book ‘A Village Awaits Doomsday’. You can contact the author here: @journohardy

This article was originally published on The Telegraph and republished on PARI.
 
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People don't have ready cash, all cash dependent businesses (and there are thousands of them) have been severely negatively impacted by this move, sorry, but there is no way for anyone to put a positive spin on this. Common people from all walks of life are suffering.
There will be some inconvenience for the short time.
However long term benefits are huge.
For me ISI fake currency factory is closed and peace in kashmir is major achievement of demonetization.
 
. .
Demonetisation Has Wrecked Farmers
BY JAIDEEP HARDIKAR ON 28/11/2016


Farmers in Vidarbha are being forced to incur terrible losses – by accepting lower prices, losing their perishable produce, or due to a fear of depositing cash payments in old notes in banks where they owe loan repayments.

The APMC at Selu. Credit: Jaideep Hardikar

Bandu Ghormade had no choice but to accept the old Rs 500 notes from the procurement agent and a lower price of Rs 200 less for every 40 kilo crate of his freshly harvested eggplants.

“If I didn’t, my produce would have gone to waste,” said the farmer in his late 40s. He grows carrots, spinach, eggplants and okra in Chicholi, about 50 kilometres from Nagpur. “Those who grow grains or cotton can hold on to their crop, I can’t.”

For years, Ghormade would load four quintals (400 kilos) of vegetables on his tempo every morning from October to December, and drive to Nagpur’s state-run Agriculture Produce Market Committee mandi, where licensed traders buy farmers’ produce through agents.

Since November 8, when high-value notes were demonetised, Ghormade has been selling at a loss at the mandi every day, while his son is going to the nearest bank, five kilometres away, to stand in queue and deposit the notes.

Still, Ghormade is earning something because he is ready to accept the old notes. Some farmers, also with perishable produce, are not – and they are making terrible losses.


Chandrabhan Jhode with his spinach crop at the Nagpur APMC: a good monsoon had led to a good harvest this year and the farmers were hoping for decent returns after successive years of drought in many regions of the country. Credit: Jaideep Hardikar

Many farmers have junked their vegetables in the absence of buyers at markets in Thane and Pune,

At the Hiwarkhed village market in Amaravati, about 160 kilometres from Nagpur, orange growers have dumped mounds of the fruit on the roads in protest at the sharp fall in prices.

The prices have fallen because the traders have stopped buying. The traders aren’t buying because most farmers aren’t accepting the old notes.

Is the farmers’ plight solely an inevitable consequence of a poorly planned demonetisation, or are they shooting themselves in the foot by insisting on payments in usable cash?

On Wednesday, November 16, Sudam Pawar, 38, was the lone farmer at the mandi in Selu town in Wardha district, about 70 kilometres from Nagpur, selling his nine quintals of cotton.

The trader offered to transfer the money directly into his bank account. Pawar, former sarpanch of Aamgaon village, agreed. The money got transferred immediately, without any hassles.

Later that day, Pawar said, eight more farmers known to him sold about 80 quintals of cotton at the mandi, accepting the old notes. With hardly any other arrivals, the trader bought their cotton at Rs 5,000 a quintal – a little more than the market price of Rs 4,750-4,900.

So why are more farmers not following their example? Pawar explains.

Most farmers are afraid to put their earnings in their bank accounts because these accounts are in the same banks from where they have taken crop loans. A majority are long-term defaulters because, for years, they haven’t earned enough to repay their loans as well as sustain their families.

Once their earnings go into their accounts, they fear the banks will discourage withdrawals, pressuring them to leave a balance equal to the sum they would need to repay by March to settle their loans. Most farmers know that this would leave them in serious jeopardy.

There’s no government order asking the banks to unilaterally deduct the loan repayment from the farmers’ accounts, but the banks have used pressure tactics in the past, knowing well that the farmers cannot afford to annoy them because they would need a loan the following year too.

“I could accept the money transfer because I don’t have a loan in my name, nor do I need cash urgently,” Pawar said. “Our crop loan is linked to my father’s account, so the bank cannot deduct the repayment amount from my account.”

Nor were the other eight sellers at the mandi in any urgent need of cash, he said. “But most small farmers, who do sustenance farming and have no other income, won’t accept cheques or money transfers.”

§

“Demonetisation has wrecked the farmers,” said Ramkrishna Umathe, farmer and deputy chairman of the Agriculture Produce Market Committee (APMC) mandi at Selu, which serves about 100 villages growing mainly soybean and cotton. “For about a week, sellers and buyers have virtually deserted our market.”


Newly-arrived sacks of soybean at the APMC in Selu town, Wardha district. Credit: Jaideep Hardikar

So the coolies, transporters and other ancillaries too have been without work, assistant market secretary Mahendra Bhandarkar said.

“This is the time of year for brisk sales, but the arrivals have tanked since November 8,” Umathe said on Wednesday.

From 5,000 quintals a day, the arrivals had dropped to zero, he said. “Yesterday, 100 sacks (quintals) came.”

Umathe said the traders were offering cheques and money transfers but the farmers weren’t ready to accept these lest the banks “deduct the crop loan.”.

“Most fields are un-irrigated here; the farmers are already under a lot of financial stress. They have to repay hand loans and the cost of inputs taken on credit, and pay their grocers and farm hands,” Umathe said.

“If there’s some residual money, it gets deposited into the bank – else the bank loans remain unpaid.”

§

Sales – and prices – of produce are falling for another reason too: a drop in consumption in the retail markets. “Forward movements have been affected,” said Rajesh Thakar, a wholesale tomato trader in Nashik.

For instance, orange arrivals at the Nagpur mandi have dried up because of a demonetisation-driven slump in sales at the markets in Kolkata and north India, said Rajesh Chhabrani, a director at the Nagpur APMC and an orange trader himself.

“Orange prices fell 25 to 35% today (Tuesday), from Rs 40,000 to Rs 25-30,000 per tonne,” he said. “Ten to 12 truckloads of oranges left the mandi for Kolkata daily; that has stopped.”

Madhusudan Harane, a director at the APMC in Hinganghat town in Wardha district, said, “Our APMC has been shut since November 8.”

He questioned the timing of the demonetisation. “Some Rs. 1,500 crores worth of annual business took place in our mandi, over half of it between October and December – the peak months for farm markets,” he said.

Ironically, a good monsoon had led to a good harvest this year and the farmers were hoping for good returns after successive years of drought in many regions of the country.

Jaideep Hardikar is a journalist, writer, researcher, cricket enthusiast and a PARI volunteer. He is a special correspondent for central India with ‘The Telegraph’ and author of the book ‘A Village Awaits Doomsday’. You can contact the author here: @journohardy

This article was originally published on The Telegraph and republished on PARI.

http://indianexpress.com/article/in...orkers-in-punjab-mandis-in-rs-500-1000-notes/

Windfall for workers in Punjab mandis in Rs 500, 1,000 notes
This year, there are around 1,830 paddy procurement centres in Punjab, with around 3 lakh labourers engaged in various jobs

THE GOVERNMENT’S demonetisation move has led to an unexpected windfall for labourers working in Punjab’s grain markets. Many say that it’s perhaps the first time they have been paid in full before the end of the paddy procurement season, which lasts from around the first week of October till the end of November. Even if the payment was mostly in Rs 500 and Rs 1,000 notes.

“I deposited Rs 35,000 in the bank after getting my salary for October and November,” said Rakesh from Bijnor in Uttar Pradesh, who works at the main mandi in Jalandhar. “We were not depositing lakhs but a few Rs 1,000 notes, which was allowed by the government. This advance payment will now help me return home in December. Earlier, we had to spend that month here waiting for our payments.”

Bhupesh, from Motihari in Bihar, who has been working at various mandis in Punjab during the procurement season over the last five years, said that on November 12, four days after the demonetisation move was announced, he received Rs 40,000 as salary for October and November.

“I do not have a bank account so I put the money in the Jan Dhan account of my wife after getting some notes exchanged for new currency. One can deposit up to Rs 49,000 cash in Jan Dhan accounts,” said Bhupesh.

This year, there are around 1,830 paddy procurement centres in Punjab, with around 3 lakh labourers engaged in various jobs such as loading, unloading, cleaning, filling and stitching of filled bags in mandis. Government agencies undertake most of the procurement, and pay wages to workers through contractors and agents who supply manpower.

Before the demonetisation move kicked in, workers had to wait at least for a month after the end of the season to get paid their wages in full. They would be paid a portion of their first month’s wages in the first week of the second month of work, with the rest being paid after the government releases the procurement money to the contractors.


This year too, in the first week of November, workers who started working at these mandis by the end of September received only partial wages initially before the demonetisation move saw contractors and agents quickly settling all dues.

Kuldeep Singh, a labour contractor, said that before demonetisation, contractors had kept a huge stock of Rs 500 and Rs 1,000 notes to pay the workers. “Those who had already withdrawn money from banks to pay the labourers were in a huge fix after the ban on old currency. That’s why they paid this amount to the workers immediately,” he said.

“This was not any unaccounted money. In mandis, a huge amount of cash is required to pay labourers so every contractor keeps some cash with him,” claimed Vijender Yadav, another contractor.

“Earlier, our payments used to be delayed for a month or more but this time the owner requested us to take old notes from him as advance wages. We agreed,” said Sahu, another labourer from Bihar, who works in Jalandhar.

As for the latest curb, limiting one-time exchange of old currency to Rs 2,000, he said, “I had already exchanged Rs 4,500 two days ago. I will not require any money for the next one month.”

Kalu Singh, who heads the Mandi Mazdoor Union in Jalandhar district, said that around 80 per cent of the 1,500 workers in the district have bank accounts and confirmed that contractors have cleared the payments of almost all workers for the entire two-month season.

Now it’s the turn of the labour contractors to wait for the state government to release payment, he said.

Ravinder Singh Cheema, vice chairman, Punjab Mandi Board, said the government is yet to release crores in payments due across the state. “In several mandis, including Sadak Mandi in Faridkot, Panje Ke Pamni in Firozpur, Chhinewal in Barnala, Banga in Nawanshahr and Gandma in Sangrur, payments have not been released since October 15. But work has not stopped in any mandi in Punjab. Our work is continuing through mutual understanding,” he said.


@Dungeness

Demonetisation: Huge surge in Jan Dhan account deposits, Rs 21,000 crore mobilised; maximum from Bengal
Mamata Banerjee-ruled West Bengal leads the pack of states which has seen the highest deposits so far followed by Karnataka.

Jan Dhan Accounts have seen a huge surge in deposits, with Rs 21,000 crore being parked in such accounts following demonetisation announced earlier this month. In the last 13 days, banks have been flooded with deposits in Jan Dhan accounts that have touched Rs 21,000 crore, sources said. On November 8, Prime Minister Narendra Modi in a surprise move announced demonetisation of 500 and 1,000 rupee notes and since then, long queues before banks and post offices are seen to deposit or exchange these currencies.

Mamata Banerjee-ruled West Bengal leads the pack of states which has seen the highest deposits so far followed by Karnataka. Following the currency withdrawal, the total balance has reached Rs 66,636 crore. As of November 9, the total balance was Rs 45,636.61 crore.

With a view to increasing banking penetration and promoting financial inclusion and with the main objective of covering all households with at least one bank account per household across the country, Pradhan Mantri Jan Dhan Yojna (PMJDY) was launched on August 28, 2014. Such accounts have a deposit limit of Rs 50,000.

Earlier, Finance Minister Arun Jaitley had said the government is looking into sudden ‘popping up’ of money into zero-balance Jan Dhan accounts. “We are getting some complaints that suddenly monies have popped up in the Jan Dhan accounts, so there is a misuse and that is why the rationing in initial days takes place,” he had said.
 
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There will be some inconvenience for the short time.
However long term benefits are huge.
For me ISI fake currency factory is closed and peace in kashmir is major achievement of demonetization.

I am amazed at Modi's ability to make people dumb. Do you have any idea how much fake currency was in the circulation? According to ISI (not the Pakistani one!) the total worth of fake currency was 400 crore. That's peanuts in a country where 18 lakh crore is the total value of currencies. Besides, what makes you think that there won't be counterfeiting of the new currency notes? Would you "demonitize" again? And peace in Kashmir? You aren't serious, are you?
 
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I am not against this move but really angry because they did not think about people suffering before doing this. They should have take nadequate measure before doing it like filling atms. And the new rs 2000 notes are basically useless for buying any basic commodities. It was hard to find the change for 500rupees notes and rs 2000? Come on. Student like us suffered greatly because we live in hostel far away from homes and they could not send us money. Really really angry.
 
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Demonetisation Has Wrecked Farmers
BY JAIDEEP HARDIKAR ON 28/11/2016


Farmers in Vidarbha are being forced to incur terrible losses – by accepting lower prices, losing their perishable produce, or due to a fear of depositing cash payments in old notes in banks where they owe loan repayments.

The APMC at Selu. Credit: Jaideep Hardikar

Bandu Ghormade had no choice but to accept the old Rs 500 notes from the procurement agent and a lower price of Rs 200 less for every 40 kilo crate of his freshly harvested eggplants.

“If I didn’t, my produce would have gone to waste,” said the farmer in his late 40s. He grows carrots, spinach, eggplants and okra in Chicholi, about 50 kilometres from Nagpur. “Those who grow grains or cotton can hold on to their crop, I can’t.”

For years, Ghormade would load four quintals (400 kilos) of vegetables on his tempo every morning from October to December, and drive to Nagpur’s state-run Agriculture Produce Market Committee mandi, where licensed traders buy farmers’ produce through agents.

Since November 8, when high-value notes were demonetised, Ghormade has been selling at a loss at the mandi every day, while his son is going to the nearest bank, five kilometres away, to stand in queue and deposit the notes.

Still, Ghormade is earning something because he is ready to accept the old notes. Some farmers, also with perishable produce, are not – and they are making terrible losses.


Chandrabhan Jhode with his spinach crop at the Nagpur APMC: a good monsoon had led to a good harvest this year and the farmers were hoping for decent returns after successive years of drought in many regions of the country. Credit: Jaideep Hardikar

Many farmers have junked their vegetables in the absence of buyers at markets in Thane and Pune,

At the Hiwarkhed village market in Amaravati, about 160 kilometres from Nagpur, orange growers have dumped mounds of the fruit on the roads in protest at the sharp fall in prices.

The prices have fallen because the traders have stopped buying. The traders aren’t buying because most farmers aren’t accepting the old notes.

Is the farmers’ plight solely an inevitable consequence of a poorly planned demonetisation, or are they shooting themselves in the foot by insisting on payments in usable cash?

On Wednesday, November 16, Sudam Pawar, 38, was the lone farmer at the mandi in Selu town in Wardha district, about 70 kilometres from Nagpur, selling his nine quintals of cotton.

The trader offered to transfer the money directly into his bank account. Pawar, former sarpanch of Aamgaon village, agreed. The money got transferred immediately, without any hassles.

Later that day, Pawar said, eight more farmers known to him sold about 80 quintals of cotton at the mandi, accepting the old notes. With hardly any other arrivals, the trader bought their cotton at Rs 5,000 a quintal – a little more than the market price of Rs 4,750-4,900.

So why are more farmers not following their example? Pawar explains.

Most farmers are afraid to put their earnings in their bank accounts because these accounts are in the same banks from where they have taken crop loans. A majority are long-term defaulters because, for years, they haven’t earned enough to repay their loans as well as sustain their families.

Once their earnings go into their accounts, they fear the banks will discourage withdrawals, pressuring them to leave a balance equal to the sum they would need to repay by March to settle their loans. Most farmers know that this would leave them in serious jeopardy.

There’s no government order asking the banks to unilaterally deduct the loan repayment from the farmers’ accounts, but the banks have used pressure tactics in the past, knowing well that the farmers cannot afford to annoy them because they would need a loan the following year too.

“I could accept the money transfer because I don’t have a loan in my name, nor do I need cash urgently,” Pawar said. “Our crop loan is linked to my father’s account, so the bank cannot deduct the repayment amount from my account.”

Nor were the other eight sellers at the mandi in any urgent need of cash, he said. “But most small farmers, who do sustenance farming and have no other income, won’t accept cheques or money transfers.”

§

“Demonetisation has wrecked the farmers,” said Ramkrishna Umathe, farmer and deputy chairman of the Agriculture Produce Market Committee (APMC) mandi at Selu, which serves about 100 villages growing mainly soybean and cotton. “For about a week, sellers and buyers have virtually deserted our market.”


Newly-arrived sacks of soybean at the APMC in Selu town, Wardha district. Credit: Jaideep Hardikar

So the coolies, transporters and other ancillaries too have been without work, assistant market secretary Mahendra Bhandarkar said.

“This is the time of year for brisk sales, but the arrivals have tanked since November 8,” Umathe said on Wednesday.

From 5,000 quintals a day, the arrivals had dropped to zero, he said. “Yesterday, 100 sacks (quintals) came.”

Umathe said the traders were offering cheques and money transfers but the farmers weren’t ready to accept these lest the banks “deduct the crop loan.”.

“Most fields are un-irrigated here; the farmers are already under a lot of financial stress. They have to repay hand loans and the cost of inputs taken on credit, and pay their grocers and farm hands,” Umathe said.

“If there’s some residual money, it gets deposited into the bank – else the bank loans remain unpaid.”

§

Sales – and prices – of produce are falling for another reason too: a drop in consumption in the retail markets. “Forward movements have been affected,” said Rajesh Thakar, a wholesale tomato trader in Nashik.

For instance, orange arrivals at the Nagpur mandi have dried up because of a demonetisation-driven slump in sales at the markets in Kolkata and north India, said Rajesh Chhabrani, a director at the Nagpur APMC and an orange trader himself.

“Orange prices fell 25 to 35% today (Tuesday), from Rs 40,000 to Rs 25-30,000 per tonne,” he said. “Ten to 12 truckloads of oranges left the mandi for Kolkata daily; that has stopped.”

Madhusudan Harane, a director at the APMC in Hinganghat town in Wardha district, said, “Our APMC has been shut since November 8.”

He questioned the timing of the demonetisation. “Some Rs. 1,500 crores worth of annual business took place in our mandi, over half of it between October and December – the peak months for farm markets,” he said.

Ironically, a good monsoon had led to a good harvest this year and the farmers were hoping for good returns after successive years of drought in many regions of the country.

Jaideep Hardikar is a journalist, writer, researcher, cricket enthusiast and a PARI volunteer. He is a special correspondent for central India with ‘The Telegraph’ and author of the book ‘A Village Awaits Doomsday’. You can contact the author here: @journohardy

This article was originally published on The Telegraph and republished on PARI.

Temporary shocks to fix the Structural probelms of the economy.

I am amazed at Modi's ability to make people dumb. Do you have any idea how much fake currency was in the circulation? According to ISI (not the Pakistani one!) the total worth of fake currency was 400 crore. That's peanuts in a country where 18 lakh crore is the total value of currencies. Besides, what makes you think that there won't be counterfeiting of the new currency notes? Would you "demonitize" again? And peace in Kashmir? You aren't serious, are you?


http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/...st-Maoist-surrenders/articleshow/55675983.cms
 
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March 13, 2016

57 more Naxals surrender before Odisha Police, total 315 in one week

http://indianexpress.com/article/in...r-before-odisha-police-total-315-in-one-week/

If this had happened now, it would have also been due to demonitzation.

I mean as I have said time and again, no one beats this govt in PR.

I think we should wait for some time before declaring the Demonetization thing a blunder or a success
read this
http://swarajyamag.com/economy/five...ess-or-failure-of-modis-demonetisation-gamble
 
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