http://scroll.in/article/821481/in-one-chennai-market-demonetisation-has-forced-tonnes-of-flowers-to-be-dumped

NOTE DEMONETISATION

In one Chennai market, demonetisation has forced tonnes of flowers to be dumped

The vendors of Koyambedu market have been severely hurt by the
decision invalidating high-value currency notes.

5 hours ago

Vinita Govindarajan

At 3 pm on a Sunday afternoon, K Paneerselvam sat on a stone platform
at Chennai’s Koyambedu market amidst a heap of unsold flowers that
were slowly beginning to wear a rather wilted look. At regular
intervals, he sprinkled water on yellow marigolds and pink
chrysanthemums as their petals turned brown.

But with barely any customers coming his way, he knew that he would
have to throw away mounds of already-perishing flowers by the next
morning.

Hardly a week after the central government announced that Rs 500 and
Rs 1,000 notes would not be legal tender on November 9, the wholesale
goods market in this area of Chennai has seen a drastic fall in sales,
especially in flowers. The cash squeeze caused by Prime Minister
Narendra Modi’s announcement on Tuesday has made it very difficult for
flower sellers to provide change for higher denomination notes, losing
customers in the process. As a result, the dustbin in the market
compound is filled to the brim with wilted flowers. There are also
piles of cast-away flowers in piles by the footpath.

Nearly 360 tonnes of wilted flowers – roses, lilies, asters and
jasmine, among them – were dumped in Koyambedu in the past week,
reported The Times of India.

Tonnes of flowers going to waste.
Tonnes of flowers going to waste.

Plummeting prices
“Last week, I was selling one kilogram of marigold for Rs 60,” said
Paneerselvam, whose business has shrunk by 75% since Wednesday. “Now
people hardly have money in hand. So I am ready to sell it at Rs. 10
per kilogram, just to earn something by the day’s end.”

Some of the flower sellers were even accepting the demonetised
currency notes. S Ravichandran, the owner of a garland shop in the
market place, said that if he did not accept the old notes, he would
have absolutely no sales.

“If you sit by my shop for one hour, you will see the number of people
who hand us the old notes of Rs 500s and Rs 1,000,” said Ravichandran.
“And they don’t want us to give back change in the old notes.”

Ravichandran is still accepting old notes.
Ravichandran is still accepting old notes.

Garlands that are usually sold for the price of Rs 500 have now been
slashed down to Rs 200, he said. Besides, Ravichandran’s customers
were offering the new Rs 2000 notes for garlands valued at Rs 200.
Providing change for a note of this large denomination was proving to
be a big hassle, especially when customers were demanding change only
in Rs 100 notes.

“I also have to give my shop attendants their daily wage,” said
Ravichandran. “But on days when we don’t get to many customers, I need
to either put a temporary hold on the flowers that I have ordered, or
a hold on the wages of my employees.”

The Koyambedu flower market.
The Koyambedu flower market.

Mounds of waste
In the backyard of the market place, K Murugan and P Dasarathan sat
under a small makeshift tent with about a dozen baskets, each with 40
kilograms of marigolds. These flowers had arrived from Bangalore at 3
am but had remained unsold all day.

“If we cannot sell them by tomorrow morning, we will have to dump all
of them,” said Murugan. “We will also have to bear the cost of all of
these flowers.”

Like many of the wholesale flower vendors in the Koyambedu market,
Murugan and Dasarathan pay a deposit of around Rs one lakh to the
farmers every season, and receive 10% of whatever sales they have made
every day as commission. The rest of the money is paid to the farmers.

But now with the cash squeeze, most of their flowers lie unsold.

“We are accepting old notes only from our regular customers,” said
Dasarathan. “If we take old notes from others and give them change,
then we have none to give our regular customers. They may not come to
our shop tomorrow.”

Dasarathan's unsold flowers.
Dasarathan's unsold flowers.

CK Muthuraman, another flower shop owner, is worried about how he will
pay his next installment of Rs one lakh to the farmers who provide him
goods – since it will not be easy to withdraw such a large amount of
cash from the bank in the next one month.

“It is with this advance money that the farmers buy seeds and pay
their labourers,” said Muthuraman. ” Now how can I give the money to
them? How will the labourers get money?”

But Muthuraman had more immediate problems. Scores of packets of
wilting flower petals were stacked up in his shop, with no buyers.

As his assistants stared at these packets gloomily, one of them
lightened up suddenly and laughed, “We should now send all these
flowers to Modi. Let him have them.”

Muthuraman's unsold packets of flower petals.
Muthuraman's unsold packets of flower petals.
-- 
Peace Is Doable

-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"Green Youth Movement" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
To post to this group, send an email to [email protected].
Visit this group at https://groups.google.com/group/greenyouth.
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.

Reply via email to