Hi Friends,

Even as I launch this today ( my 80th Birthday ), I realize that there is yet so much to say and do. There is just no time to look back, no time to wonder,"Will anyone read these pages?"

With regards,
Hemen Parekh
27 June 2013

Now as I approach my 90th birthday ( 27 June 2023 ) , I invite you to visit my Digital Avatar ( www.hemenparekh.ai ) – and continue chatting with me , even when I am no more here physically

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Saturday, 30 May 2026

A VACCINE for Rs 500 CURRENCY NOTE ?

===================================================


Open Letter to the Hon'ble Prime Minister


To: 

Shri Narendra Modiji, Prime Minister of India 


From: Hemen Parekh 


Subject: 


A "vaccine" for the ₹500 note —

 

Passive RFID as the next reform under :

" Banish Black Money; Eliminate the Cancer of Corruption "


================================================


Respected Modiji,


As you may well be speaking, in this morning's Mann Ki Baat, of the next round of

 reforms on the road to Viksit Bharat — 2047, I write to place before you one

 specific, low-cost reform that belongs squarely under the banner of Banish Black

 Money; Eliminate the Cancer of Corruption.


The idea is simple to state: 

do not eliminate the high-denomination note — inoculate it. 

Give every ₹500 note a "vaccine" of Passive RFID, so that bulk anonymous cash

 becomes detectable at the points that matter, without disturbing the honest

 citizen's wallet.


Why this moment, and not later

The Reserve Bank's Annual Report for 2025-26 has confirmed two things that,

 taken together, open a rare window:

  • A phased rollout of banknotes with upgraded security features from

  •  the middle of 2026 — meaning the note is about to be re-engineered from

  •  the substrate up.

  • An active exploration of polymer (plastic) banknotes, driven by a printing

  •  bill that has climbed roughly 25% to ₹6,372.8 crore.

Any feature that must live inside a note rather than be printed on its surface —

 has to be designed in at this stage


The mid-2026 redesign is the one realistic  opportunity in a decade to do this.

The polymer substrate makes it easier, not harder, since resonant structures

laminate cleanly into film.

 

The problem the redesign alone will not solve


The same RBI report shows the ₹ 500 note at 85.5% of all currency in

 circulation by value, with counterfeiting having migrated decisively onto it.

 Better holograms raise the cost of forgery; they do nothing about the deeper

 truth — the high-denomination note remains the only practical instrument for

 moving black money in bulk. It is no accident that the ₹2,000 note was quietly

 withdrawn amid concern that high-denomination currency was feeding hoarding

 and laundering.


Why "abolish the ₹500" is the wrong lever

It is tempting to argue, as I have long noted, that most economies cap their

highest note at roughly 100× the lowest, and that India's ₹1 note has all but

vanished. But here is the hard arithmetic: eliminating the ₹500 would remove

85.5% of currency value — almost exactly the 86% withdrawn in 2016. 


It would be a second demonetisation in all but name, and would fall hardest

on the small trader and the rural household.


The lever worth pulling is not elimination. It is traceability — keeping the

convenience of the note while stripping it of its anonymity in bulk.


The proposal :   a chipless, battery-free "vaccine"


When I first proposed embedding sensors in our high-denomination notes —

around the 2016 demonetisation — the obstacle was power: an active RFID tag

needed a battery, and paper-thin batteries were not practical. That obstacle is

gone, and not because batteries got thinner — because the right

technology needs no battery at all.


The mature approach is chipless, passive RFID: resonant structures printed in

conductive ink directly into the note, carrying no chip and no battery. Energised by

a reader, each note reflects a unique signature that can be cryptographically bound

to its serial number. This is exactly the direction I set out years ago — printing

serial numbers into the note with ink carrying nano-scale RFID structures


( See Bringing Light to the Vision-Impaired, and my collected notes on RFID

 in currency notes. )


How it banishes black money without surveilling citizens


The objective is not to track where every note travels. It is to make bulk

anonymous cash detectable, and only at defined choke-points:


  • Choke-point reading, not ambient tracking — 

  • at currency chests, bank counters, sub-registrar offices, bullion and high-

  • value retail points. A genuine bulk movement triggers an aggregate count,

  •  not a citizen dossier.

  • Threshold logic — 

  • the system flags volume above a statutory cash limit; an individual's wallet

  •  stays invisible.

  • GST as the analogy — 


  • just as GST turned indirect-tax flows from invisible to data-rich, this turns

  •  bulk cash from anonymous to accountable, without recording every

  •  household's small purchase.

I would be candid with you, Modiji, about the one serious objection — privacy. 


A naively tagged note could let anyone with a reader sense how much cash a

person carries. 


This must be designed out from the start : 


very short read range,

#  encrypted serial-bound signatures 

readable only by authorised readers, 

statutory ring-fencing of who may read and for what purpose


 and 


an aggregate-first architecture

 

Designed this way, it protects the citizen even as it exposes the  hoarder.

 


What I respectfully urge


Direct the constitution of an Inter-Ministerial Task Force — Finance, MeitY,

 RBI, SPMCIL/BRBNMPL, NITI Aayog, with an independent privacy and

 cryptography panel — to evaluate Passive (chipless) RFID as a security

 feature within the mid-2026 banknote upgrade and the polymer programme.




Authorise a closed field trial on a limited ₹500 print run — exactly as the

 RBI did for varnished notes — testing read reliability, clone-resistance,

 durability and reader cost.



Require a privacy-by-design specification, published for public and

 parliamentary scrutiny, before any wider issue.

The one-line case :

The mid-2026 redesign lets us keep the ₹ 500 note's

convenience ,

 while taking away the anonymity that makes it the instrument of choice

for black money — at the cost of an extra ink pass, and without a second

demonetisation. 


The choice is not note or no note. It is anonymous note or accountable note.


This argument I have built over many years, across my writing on black money (A

 Gordian Knot?), on demonetisation (Allow Them to Do a Good Deed), and on

 the digital-payments transition (A Glimpse of the Digi-Dhan?). I would be

 honoured to present the technical and privacy-design detail to the relevant

 departments.


With deep respect and in service of Viksit Bharat — 2047,


Hemen Parekh 


www.HemenParekh.ai · www.IndiaAGI.ai 


Blog: myblogepage.blogspot.com



 

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