Serpentine queues were seen in front of banks and ATMs .(AFP Photo)
Thiruvananthapuram:
The currency crunch following the ban on Rs 500 and Rs 1000 notes is "sheer madness" and the situation, if it goes on for a month, will lead to mass poverty, Kerala Finance Minister Thomas Issac has said.
The economics professor-turned-politician said he was shocked to hear Finance Minister Arun Jaitley argue that it will take a month for normalcy to return in the banking sector.
"By now things have gone haywire," the minister said. "Wages have not been paid in the plantation sector in Kerala. If this is going to last a week, then it will be abject poverty in the state. This is sheer madness."
Mr Issac had come under fire in the social media when he criticised Prime Minister Narendra Modi's November 8 decision to spike Rs 500 and Rs 1,000 currencies. He said his worst fears were now coming true.
As in the past few days, Sunday also witnessed serpentine queues in front of banks and ATMs in the state as people tried to surrender the old currency and withdraw their own money.
But many ATMs were still not working. The ones that were functional ran out of cash soon.
Now the money spinning tourism industry in Kerala has started to feel the heat.
The chairman of Kerala Tourism Development Corporation, M Vijayakumar, said around 40 per cent of their bookings had been cancelled.
The tourism industry, he said, is heading for an unprecedented crisis as the fresh peak tourist season in the state is November to January. "The stage has come when tourists will spend more time waiting in front of ATMs than exploring Kerala," said Mr Vijayakumar, a CPI-M leader and a former Speaker.
Another segment that has come under stress is the nearly 2.5 million migrant labourers in Kerala.
"We have not received our weekly wages that we normally get every Saturday. We are unable to do any job as we stand in queues in front of ATMs," said a labourer from Assam.
"We are going through our worst times as we do not have money to buy food," he added.
Opposition Leader Ramesh Chennithala called Prime Minister Narendra Modi a "new version of Mohammed Bin Tughlaq".
"All are surprised to hear Jaitley saying that everyone can do their transactions online," he said. "How many people in this country can afford to do that?"