Chief Minister Laxmikant Parsekar was allaying fears that traders, hawkers and vendors who are not able to shift to cashless options in their businesses need not worry if they fail to do so by year-end.
"To go cashless is an appeal. I am clarifying again. We have said that we are not going to be cent per cent cashless," he said.
Goa can do it as the state is having high literacy rate and also percolation of Information Technology is higher, Parsekar said.
"Butwe appeal to the people that there should bemaximum use of point of sale machines and also use of mobile software. We should try. There will be no compulsion from government side," he said.
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"No one should misunderstand the concept," the chief minister said pointing out that some people were trying to earn political mileage from the issue.
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Meanwhile, the BJP today advised Parsekar against setting a deadline for the implementation of the concept.
He said the party leaders today called upon the chief minister and requested him to postpone the December 30 deadline to go cashless.
"Let us first educate people about the cashless concept," Tanawade said.
He said, "Once you set up a deadline to implement cashless transaction, the officers might go and trouble those people who are not able to learn or adopt it (the transaction). Officers usually go by what has been directed to them."
Noting that the youth have already shifted to cashless transaction in their day-to-day dealings, the BJP leader said others should learn from them.