Hindustan Times (Amritsar)

5 northern states, UT move towards uniform fuel prices

- Sukhdeep Kaur sukhdeep.kaur@hindustant­imes.com ■

CHANDIGARH: Five northern states and the Union territory of Chandigarh ruled by three different parties — BJP, Congress and the Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) — on Tuesday agreed to move towards uniform fuel rates.

The prices of petrol and diesel have notched up fresh records in recent months and the Centre has been asking states to cut down their value added tax (VAT) on fuel to provide relief to the common man.

A meeting of north zone finance ministers and officers attended by Haryana, Punjab, Delhi, Himachal Pradesh, Uttar Pradesh and Chandigarh decided to form a committee of officers to prepare a report on bringing uniformity in fuel prices and submit it within two weeks.

Delhi deputy chief minister Manish Sisodia, who holds the finance portfolio, suggested at the meeting that liquor rates too should be uniform in the neighbouri­ng states to prevent undercutti­ng of each other’s revenue.

His Punjab counterpar­t Manpreet Badal proposed that registrati­on fee and permits for transport vehicles too should be harmonised to avoid diversion of revenue.

Haryana finance minister Capt Abhimanyu, who organised the meeting, later said the committee of officers will look into all three aspects — uniform fuel rates, liquor rates and transport taxes. Based on its report, the states will decide on the next course of action. Excise and taxation officials represente­d Himachal (CM Jairam Thakur holds the finance portfolio), UP and Chandigarh.

Punjab’s tax slab on petrol (35.12%) is highest not only among its neighbouri­ng states, but in the entire north India. However, the cash-strapped government has been refusing to cut it down, saying it is hard-pressed for funds and VAT on fuel is a major source of its cash flow to foot health, education and other expenses.

On whether Punjab would have to bring down VAT on petrol, Manpreet said the VAT charged by Punjab on diesel is lower than some neighbouri­ng states.

“Each state will have to tweak its tax slabs to finally have a common band with minimal difference in petrol and diesel rates. If the prices vary by less than a rupee, for instance, it would no more be lucrative for anyone to purchase fuel from a bordering state. The same applies to liquor and transport taxes. If all neighbouri­ng states charge the same registrati­on and permit fee for vehicles, the owners will not get vehicles registered from a neighbouri­ng state,” he added.

Being a Union territory, the taxes for petrol, diesel, excise on liquor as well as transport permits and registrati­ons are the lowest in Chandigarh.

The first such meeting of northern states in May 2015 was held at Delhi and the Arvind Kejriwal government had to hike its VAT rate on petrol from 20% to 25% and diesel from 12.5% to 16.6% to bring them at a par with Punjab and Haryana.

Six BJP-ruled states, including Himachal and Chandigarh, had slashed their taxes in October last year after a similar surge in prices. Some opposition-ruled states such as Kerala and Andhra Pradesh too have done so this year.

FUEL PRICING

PUNJAB, HARYANA, HP, UP, DELHI, CHANDIGARH — RULED BY CONG, BJP AND AAP — ALSO DECIDE TO HAVE COMMON LIQUOR RATES, TRANSPORT TAXES

The per litre fuel price is a sum total of excise duty collected by the central government (Rs 19.48 a litre on petrol and Rs 15.33 on diesel), VAT charged by states, cost of crude oil, customs duty, freight and commission of oil companies and dealers).

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