Summary
- Fresh data from CBK shows currency outside banks rose from Sh157.7 billion in September to Sh191.6 billion in November.
- The circulation was at Sh222 billion in May before dropping to Sh196.9 billion in June when the four-month exercise of mopping up the old Sh1,000 notes started.
- A CBK Gazette notice on May 31, 2019 said the older Sh1,000 bank notes were withdrawn from circulation and would cease to be legal tender on October 1, 2019.
The value of currency circulating outside banks rose by Sh33.9
billion in two months to November, touching a five-month high after the
end of Central Bank of Kenya (CBK) demonetisation process in September.
Fresh data from CBK shows currency outside banks rose from Sh157.7 billion in September to Sh191.6 billion in November.
The
circulation was at Sh222 billion in May before dropping to Sh196.9
billion in June when the four-month exercise of mopping up the old
Sh1,000 notes started.
A CBK Gazette notice on May 31,
2019 said the older Sh1,000 bank notes were withdrawn from circulation
and would cease to be legal tender on October 1, 2019.
The
fastest drop in cash outside lenders was seen in the September-October
period when it dipped by 26.4 percent or Sh27.2 billion to close at
Sh157.7 billion.
Increased money outside banks means more people who had rushed
to take money into the banking system on demonetisation directive are
beginning to withdraw their money.
Most cash-rich persons and businesses that handle high liquidity prefer holding money in cash to meet their transactions needs.
CBK
announced last year that it received 209,661,000 pieces of the old
Sh1,000 notes at the end of September in contrast with 217,047,000
pieces that were in circulation on June 1. This means Sh7.386 billion
worth of cash was rendered worthless at the end of demonetisation. “A
significant proportion of this amount would represent cash that was held
by individuals who were unable or unwilling to subject themselves to
the robust checks in place,” CBK announced.
No comments :
Post a Comment