Where the coins have gone?
People face an acute shortage of
coins of smaller denominations, making even the simplest tasks of buying
groceries and vegetables, Paying for bus or auto fares, or commuting a
complicated transaction.
It seems that suddenly no has the coins
to give but only to take. Coins of one and five rupee appear to vanish from the
market. If your vegetable or grocery bill end with two or Five (say 12 or 15),
the shopkeeper asks you to either give the coins, take less or more or accept
cheap candies. It seems that they are helpless.
I asked my friends and overheard people
discussing over the same problem.
One of the common answers I found out is
that One and Five-rupee coins are now the cheapest source of raw material for
manufacturers of Blade, fancy metal items and false jewelry. A metallurgist
friend of me told me that each single one-rupee coin if melted could make a
pack of six razor blades.
At present Re 1, copper nickel will have metal value
of Rs 2.50, while Re 1 nickel coin could be worth Rs 10. Many said that Coins worth crores are locked in donation boxes of large
temples.
However, I was unsatisfied and tried to get some solid clues. If
metal content and donations from ever increasing religious population in India is
the matter then why the paper bank notes of 1,2 and five rupee are also rare?
One
of my friends told me that RBI is the main source of issue of Coins and notes of smaller amounts followed by
selected bank branches and currency chests. Earlier, traders like big
retailers, hoteliers and bus syndicates use to get coins directly from RBI
counters. I came to know the following information.
·
It is a recent policy
matter of RBI to withdraw from all sorts of retail operations.
·
The number of
coins issued at RBI office in Kolkata has come down from 400 bags (of 2000
coins each) to around 150 bags
·
In the monetary
policy statement in April, RBI had said that it intended to channelize the
distribution of bank notes and coins only through currency chests and bank
branches.
·
RBI has also
stopped printing of Bank notes of denominations of Rs 1, 2, and 5.
· RBI has decided to change the raw
material used for manufacturing of coins from Copper-Nickel to FSS (Ferritic
Stainless Steel).
· FSS is also a coveted metal for some
industries, which would like to melt it to make fancy items and earn larger
profits.
Call for
looking for new methods.
RBI
must carry out research for minting coins or printing small value currency
notes. This may be done in the following suggested ways.
·
There
are Few PSU Banks, who are currently authorized to distribute coins. For
example in N-24 paraganas district of Kolkata only two Branches of SBI deals
with distribution of coins. There should be more bank branches with automatic
coin vending machines.
·
Law
keeping authorities can easily wipe out the illegal selling stalls of coin
selling and hoarding.
·
Mint
plastic tokens with security marks perhaps with a small metal foil type cover
·
Issue
small currency notes with plastic lamination. The reason to discontinue the
printing was that these notes soiled easily. Plastic lamination may minimize
this problem.
·
Currency
notes of odd denominations like Rs 6, 7, 9, 11, 15, 19 and so forth. Suppose
your shopping bill is Rs 56. You take out a Rs 50 note from your purse and for
the remaining 6 Rupees you search your pocket for coins or give the shopkeeper
Rs 50+ 10. You may end up with accepting 4 useless candies. The
problem is often with odd figures. This may solve the problem to a large
extent.
3 comments:
Nice article. Agree these days even the beggars refuse to accept coins. They have no value anymore. It shows that the rupee value is really falling.
This is shocking..!! I did not know you can melt a coin and make so many other stuff. O_O
Plastic Coin & Coupon in Bus Hearing on 9th September' 2013
in Kolkata High Court Room No - 1
Item No : 48
INDIA's SMILE versus Union of India & Others
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