Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

Fuel prices rise, govt rules out tax rollback

- Suchetana Ray letters@hindustant­imes.com

NEWDELHI: The government said on Wednesday it will not step in to adjust prices of petrol and diesel, which are at its highest in three years, and blamed a spike in internatio­nal crude oil prices for the increase.

The price of petrol in Delhi, for instance, has increased by ~4.90 a litre in the last two months, triggering criticism from consumers and the opposition.

“It is not in the good interest of the general public for the government to intervene in the dayto-day business of oil marketing companies,” oil minister Dharmendra Pradhan said after a meeting with the heads of staterun refiners on Wednesday.

Petrol cost ~70.38 a litre on September 13, up from ~65.48 a litre on June 16 when the government introduced the system of revising fuel prices daily in sync with internatio­nal oil markets. Prior to June 16, fuel prices were revised every fortnight to reflect internatio­nal prices and exchange rates of the two weeks gone by.

Pradhan said that crude prices are “seeing the impact of hurricanes Harvey and Irma”.

“This has caused a 13% decline in global refining capacity... This has caused internatio­nal crude prices to increase; petrol has increased 18% and diesel prices have increased 20% in global markets,” said Pradhan.

He said he was optimistic of global prices cooling in the coming days.

The price break-up for every litre of petrol in Delhi shows that state-run companies charge dealers ~30.70. The remaining is in excise duty, dealers’ commission and state VAT which takes the price to ₹70.38.

India’s crude oil basket was at $53 per barrel on September 13, compared to $46 a barrel on June 16.

INDIA’S CRUDE OIL BASKET WAS AT $53 PER BARREL ON SEPTEMBER 13, COMPARED TO $46 A BARREL ON JUNE 16.

The last time people in Delhi paid around Rs 70 a litre for petrol was in September 2014. But at that time, the Indian Brent crude oil cost $95.50 a barrel, nearly double of what it does now.

The fall in crude oil prices have been offset by an increase in taxes, particular­ly the central excise duty that was raised 9 times between November 2014 and January 2016. The correspond­ing tax mop up went from Rs 99,000 crore in 2014-15 to Rs 2,42,000 crore in 2016-17. Additional­ly, VAT, a component levied by state government­s, has also been increased in some regions.

Deflecting calls for a rollback on such duties, Pradhan said the revenue is used for financing social and infrastruc­ture projects.

He left the decision on taxes to the finance ministry.

India imports 80% of its oil need, raking up a hefty import bill, but sliding crude prices have trimmed it as well as the current account deficit.

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