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Nepalis, Saddled With Demonetised Indian Currency, Risk Losing Savings

"India should have allowed the exchange facility much earlier."
INDRANIL MUKHERJEE via Getty Images

KATHMANDU -- Nepalis stand to lose millions of dollars held in high-value Indian bank notes that India banned last year and has yet to exchange, a Nepali central bank official said on Tuesday.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi in November last year banned ₹500 and ₹1,000 bank notes as part of a drive against unaccounted wealth in India that has also hit Nepal where Indian rupees are widely used.

People holding the notes in India were given a little less than two months to exchange them at banks.

In March, officials from the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) visited Nepal and promised to allow every Nepali citizen to exchange ₹4,500 worth of the old notes for new ones.

"That was only a verbal assurance but no formal decision from India has come to us," said Chinta Mani Shivakoti, a deputy governor of the central Nepal Rastra Bank.

"Even if this amount was exchanged, individuals holding more than 4,500 Indian rupees risk losing the excess," Shivakoti said.

Nepal depends heavily on funds from workers in India, who sent home $640 million in 2016, or about 3 % of its gross domestic product.

The Indian central bank declined to comment. An Indian finance ministry spokesman also declined to comment, saying it was a central bank matter.

India fears that if it agrees to Nepal's demand to allow Nepalis to exchange unlimited amounts, a large number of Indians may launder their ill-gotten old notes through Nepal.

Shivakoti said Nepal's banks hold 78.5 million Indian rupees worth of the old notes, while business officials estimate that up to 10 billion in old Indian rupees ($155 million) may be held by individuals in Nepal's informal sector.

Another NRB official, Bhisma Raj Dhungana, said the delay in resolving the issue was causing concern.

"India should have allowed the exchange facility much earlier," Dhungana said.

Ordinary Nepalis say they have been hit badly by the delay.

"My savings are worth no more than waste papers. I can't do anything about it," said Saila Thakuri, who has ₹8,000 in old notes sent by his son who works in a restaurant in New Delhi.

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