All existing 500 and 1,000 Indian rupee banknotes will be unusable starting on November 11th, and worthless on New Year's Eve:
Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi has announced that the existing 500 and 1,000 rupee banknotes will be withdrawn from the financial system overnight. The surprise move is part of a crackdown on corruption and illegal cash holdings, he said in a nationwide address on television. "Black money and corruption are the biggest obstacles in eradicating poverty," he said.
New 500 and 2,000 rupee denomination notes will be issued to replace them. The move is designed to lock out money that is unaccounted for and may have been acquired corruptly, or be being withheld from the tax authorities. It is seen as the boldest move by any Indian government to clampdown on tax evaders.
People will have until December 30th to exchange the notes at banks.
(Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Friday November 11 2016, @02:38AM
> Tellers most certainly do not record those.
Technically true: tellers don't write them down. But the cash dispensing machines that the transaction spits the bills out from definitely do record transaction ID and serial. Tellers don't have big drawers of cash anymore because of bank robberies, they're just there to check ID/passcode/bankbook and key in the interaction.