NEW DELHI: The government does not intend to reprint all the currency that has been demonetised and wants to have a “significant and substantial“ part of it in digital form, finance minister Arun Jaitley said on Saturday .The finance minister also denied media reports that a special concession had been made to political parties on cash deposits.“The legal and taxation regime with regard to political parties remains absolutely what it has been in the last 15-20 years. There is not a single change that has been brought about nor is any change at the moment contemplated,“ Jaitley said on the sidelines of the Economic Times Awards for Corporate Excellence 2016 in Mumbai.Speaking at the event, Jaitley sought to assure that political funding would get more transparent in the future as an outcome of demonetisation .According to the minister, the reform was aimed at changing the Indian attitude to tax where non-compliance had become a way of life.“Could anybody buy an asset without dividing the colour of money in which the payment would be made? The answer would have been no. There are wholesaler-retailer relations based on how much is on the books and how much is off the books.This had become an acceptable way of life and stealing money from the government was considered smart,“ said Jaitley. He added that altering this normal was going to be extremely disruptive.“I thinks this Indian normal, where recovery of taxes is terrorism and non-payment is a way of life, this normal has to change,“ he said.