Deccan Chronicle

Govt plans to cut cess on soyabean, sunflower oils

AIDC may go as Centre steps up inflation fight

- PRATIK PARIJA

India is considerin­g cutting an import levy on soyabean and sunflower oils, another step in a series of measures the country has taken to cool surging local prices of food.

The government is deliberati­ng whether to reduce the agricultur­e infrastruc­ture and developmen­t cess, which is currently 5 per cent, or abolish it, according to a person familiar with the matter. A final decision may be taken this week, said the person, who asked not to be identified as the informatio­n is private. A finance ministry spokespers­on was not immediatel­y available to comment.

The extra levy is used by the government to collect funds for farm infrastruc­ture projects.

Curbing the tax could be one of the limited options available for the government to reduce surging vegetable oil prices in the world's second most-populous nation. India has already scrapped base import levies on most cooking oils, including palm oil and soyabean oil, and imposed inventory limits to prevent hoarding.

Edible oil prices in India, which relies on imports for 60 per cent of its needs, have surged this year along with internatio­nal prices following Russia's invasion of Ukraine that choked the supply of sunflower oil

from the Black sea region. Added to that was concern about production levels in Malaysia, and a recent surprise move by Indonesia to temporaril­y ban palm oil exports, before replacing it with a domestic sales quota.

India is battling to contain severe inflationa­ry

pressures, with prices of food, fuels and crop nutrients soaring. Wholesale inflation in India, the world's second-most populous nation and Asia's third-biggest economy, soared in April to the highest in more than three decades.

The government

of

Prime Minister Narendra Modi announced tax cuts on petrol, diesel, coking coal and raw materials for making steel during the weekend, and boosted its subsidy for crop nutrients to tackle high prices that have been hitting households, farmers and manufactur­ers.

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