Releasing the committee's interim report, State Planning Board Vice-Chairman V K Ramachandran said, "We are still assessing the impact on the real resources mobilisation of the state, which is crucial for the 13th Five Year Plan that will begin in April 2017."
"I am not going to make any prediction on resource mobilisation. Hope things will not be as bad as now," he added.
The report said lack of access to cash has dealt a blow to tourism.
There was a dip of nearly 17.7 per cent in arrival of domestic tourists and 8.7 per cent in foreigners post demonetisation compared to the same time last year, Ramachandran said.
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Similarly, remittances play an important part in Kerala's economy and the constraints caused by the policy can cause disruption in flow of remittances, it said.
The report said RBI's decision to keep away cooperative banks and societies out of the note exchange process has badly affected the state as 70 per cent of deposits in primary agricultural cooperative societies in the country come from Kerala.
Besides being excluded from exchange of demonetised notes, access of PACs to currency was cut off, forcing these institutions to shut down their operations, the report said.
What was consciously ignored was that it was not each PAC that was being denied access to cash, but lakhs of members who held deposits in these institutions. "There cannot be a single other instance of expropriation of the purchasing power of a population of this magnitude," the report added.
On a cashless society, Chandrasekhar said it is a distant dream and is not going to happen in the near future due to lack of various infrastructure in the country.