Akhilesh Yadav questions BJP over currency printing tender
Synopsis
Key Takeaways
Samajwadi Party president Akhilesh Yadav on Friday, 17 July 2026, launched a sharp attack on the BJP-led central government, alleging that a tender floated for currency-related work signals the privatisation of India's sovereign monetary functions and reflects a pre-arranged deal favouring private profiteers.
Context
Yadav posted in Hindi, asking: 'भ्रष्ट भाजपा राज में अब नोटों का भी प्राइवेटाइजेशन हो जाएगा क्या?' ('Will currency notes also be privatised under the corrupt BJP regime?'). He alleged that the scale and sensitivity of the work was being matched with a deliberately small and 'miserly' tender — suggesting the formal process was merely a cover for a decision already made behind closed doors. 'It seems the deal has already been fixed; what is being shown is just a formality,' he wrote.
The post was accompanied by an image, which Yadav used to underscore his contention that the government's outsourcing model had sunk to an unprecedented low. He further questioned whether the government itself would eventually be outsourced, invoking the ruling party's own flagship self-reliance slogan against it.
Policy Backdrop
The Atmanirbhar Bharat Abhiyan, launched in May 2020, was positioned as a comprehensive drive to promote domestic production and reduce India's dependence on foreign entities across critical sectors — including manufacturing, defence, and monetary infrastructure. Critics have long argued that selective privatisation and outsourcing of sovereign functions contradict the scheme's stated goals.
Successive governments have issued tenders for security printing and currency-related tasks while maintaining oversight through the Reserve Bank of India (RBI). Opposition parties, including the Samajwadi Party, have repeatedly contended that such tendering processes favour well-connected private contractors and erode public control over core sovereign functions. Yadav's post sharpens this critique by directly tying the alleged tender to what he calls a 'commission-based model' of governance.
Yadav asked pointedly: 'जब देश की मुद्रा ही आत्मनिर्भर नहीं होगी तो अर्थव्यवस्था और देश आत्मनिर्भर कैसे होगा?' ('When the country's own currency is not self-reliant, how can the economy and the nation be self-reliant?'). The rhetorical question is a direct challenge to the government's Atmanirbhar branding.
Stakeholders and Impact
The debate touches directly on public sector workers employed in security printing and currency management, who could be affected if outsourcing norms are expanded. Common citizens are the broader stakeholder group, given that currency integrity is foundational to everyday economic transactions.
Yadav concluded his post with a blunt charge: 'भाजपा सरकार नहीं; मुनाफ़ाख़ोरों की भागीदार है' — 'The BJP is not a government; it is a partner of profiteers.' The framing is designed to consolidate opposition sentiment ahead of the ongoing parliamentary monsoon session, where such issues are likely to surface as questions on the floor of the House.
What's Next
The allegation is likely to prompt parliamentary questions on RBI tenders and security-printing contracts during the monsoon session. Opposition benches may press the Finance Ministry and the RBI for details on the tender's scope, value, and selection criteria.
Any government clarification on the nature and necessity of the outsourcing arrangement will be closely watched, as will any revision to existing norms governing the printing and management of Indian currency. The controversy also adds to a broader opposition narrative around the BJP's economic governance ahead of state elections in the political calendar.