Wednesday 18 January 2017

RBI has pumped in 9.2 trillion rupees of new notes: Source


NEW DELHI:
           The Reserve Bank of India has injected 9.2 trillion rupees ($135.21 billion) worth of new currency notes into the banking system to help replace the notes banned in November, a parliamentary panel member quoted RBI governor Urjit Patel as saying on Wednesday.

Patel met the panel on finance to answer questions about the November 8 abolition of Rs 500 and Rs 1,000 notes, or 86 percent of the currency then in circulation, in a bid to unearth billions of dollars of unaccounted money.

About 15.4 trillion rupees worth of the notes were removed from circulation.Patel, however, failed to provide any figure for how many of the banned notes had been deposited into the banking system and he did not provide clarity on when the cash situation would become normal, according to a second member of the panel who was also present at the appearance.

Both the members spoke on the condition of anonymity as the panel's deliberations are confidential.

The RBI governor also told the parliamentary panel that consultations between the government and the central bank on demonetization had began in January 2016, the second panel member said.

However, the government notified the RBI it wanted specifically to scrap Rs 500 and Rs 1,000 notes on November 7, a day before the RBI board formally approved the recommendation, the member said, citing a note sent to the panel by the central bank. Modi then announced the decision later on November 8.The ban sparked a severe cash crunch that has disrupted economic activity, leading to the biggest monthly fall in automobile sales in 16 years in December. The slump coincided with a contraction in services industry and manufacturing activity.

The International Monetary Fund (IMF) on Monday cut a full percentage point off India's GDP growth forecast, to 6.6 percent, in the fiscal year that ends in March 2017, citing the blow to the cash-reliant economy.The IMF also trimmed the growth outlook for the fiscal year 2017-18 to 7.2 percent from 7.6 percent estimated earlier.

On Wednesday, two top finance ministry officials also appeared before the panel to present the government's position.The member said the panel would summon Patel again after the upcoming parliament session.
Stay updated on the go with Times of India News App. Click here to download it for your device.

Friday 13 January 2017

WHY INDIAN JOB SEEKERS NEED TO WORRY ABOUT CHANGES TO H-1B


New Delhi:
Donald Trump has listed immigration reform among executive actions he plans on his first day in office. Ahead of his swearing-in, two American lawmakers have introduced a bill that seeks to change the H-1B and L-1 visa programmes. Here's how the bill could sting Indian workers.

Impact on Indian job seekers:
The bill says you can bring in foreign workers as long as you pay them well. So Indian those who get a job in US should get a descent package.The new measures could passed if more people to try visas under other routes such as L1. The L1 visa is not subject to numerical or salary restrictions but the bill proposes setting wage requirements for it too.

Why US needs IT talent from India?
The Indian IT industry believes the US does not have enough IT talent and needs to bring in workers from India on the work permit. Moreover, it's not a one-way traffic. Indian IT companies also create jobs in US and contribute to the US economy.

1. Indian IT contributes about 4 lakh direct and indirect jobs in the US, accounting for about $5 billion in yearly taxes.

2. Indians with H-1B and L-1 visas contribute $1 billion annually to the US.