Deccan Chronicle

Packaged products may have universal pricing

- PRABHUDATT­A MISHRA & SUBHASH NARAYAN | FC

After successful­ly checking dual pricing for bottled drinking water, the government now plans to ban such practice for all packaged products, be it a packet of needles or an air conditione­r.

The move will mean that a bottle of soft drink or any other packaged product of the same make will be priced universall­y across the country irrespecti­ve of the place and time of sale.

At times it has been observed that the same product is available for a different price at a mall or a cinema hall. And the difference too is huge.

Sources said that proposal on universal pricing for packaged products is currently being evaluated by the law ministry. If approved, it will be a major accomplish­ment by the NDA government to protect consumer interests. The move has been initiated by consumer affairs minister Ram Vilas Paswan.

After successful­ly checking dual pricing in bottled drinking water, the government now plans to ban such practice for all packaged products, be it a packet of needles or an air conditione­r.

Sources said consumer affairs minister Mr Ram Vilas Paswan is very keen to get it implemente­d. He had a lot of deliberati­ons within the ministry to find a way under the current provisions in the law as any amendment or new legislatio­n would take time.

The consumer affairs ministry, which also fixes rules for the weight and measures department­s of the states, has decided to change the rules under the Legal Metrology Act. This law makes provisions for regulating weight, labels etc. of a packaged product.

Under the proposal, no company will be allowed to fix different prices (MRPs) for identical products in all “pre-packaged commoditie­s”, sources said.

Since dual maximum retail price is considered an unfair trade practice under consumer protection law, the ministry has got power to bring this issue under legal metrology, the sources said.

“It has been found that many companies are printing different MRPs for their products one sold in open market and another for big retail chains. Because the retail chains want to offer discount, they are forcing companies to print a higher MRP,” an official said. Because of bulk buying, companies are also agreeing to this ‘unfair’ request of the retailers.

At the insistence of the consumer affairs ministry, beverage giant Pepsi has already discontinu­ed the practice of dual MRP and started selling its mineral water — Aquafina — at the same MRP everywhere, be it malls, cinema halls, railway stations, airports and restaurant­s.

Mr Paswan had said on April 14 that dual MRP is against law and Pepsi’s decision to sell its product at one price or MRP would go a long way in ensuring that the practice is universall­y accepted by the industry.

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