The Pak Banker

Petrol price U-turn

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Prime Minister Imran Khan in May reduced fuel prices so as to curb inflation and pass on to the public the benefits of lower internatio­nal oil rates, thereby causing protracted issue of fuel shortage in the country.

However, the government has to retreat from its position and agreed to raise prices at the pump by a near historic amount.

Last Friday night the government caved in and passed through the single largest oil price increase the country has seen in many years. In a hurriedly called press conference, the minister and the prime minister's special adviser on petroleum appeared together and took the defensive position that internatio­nal oil prices had seen more than a 100pc increase in the last month, as well as offered the bizarre comfort that despite the price increase, the oil companies would continue to suffer.

With their first point they have confirmed what the oil industry was arguing all along: that under the notified price in May it was impossible to arrange for fresh supplies. With their second point, they have given the impression that their minds are less focused on solving problems and more focused on trading and deflecting blame. The earlier pro-public decision had sparked immediate protests from oil companies and refineries who argued that the downward price revision had been made on the basis of month-old prices, and the prevailing internatio­nal prices, as well their direction, at the time were sharply upward. It would not be possible for them to arrange cargo deliveries in the month of June at the price the government had notified in May, they said.

On the last day of May, the government notified a second decrease, and the minister petroleum - Mr Omar Ayub - went on the offensive on the media calling the oil companies a 'mafia'. This aggressive turn in the sequence of events was followed up by lawenforce­ment action against oil executives after they were accused of 'hoarding' supplies.

Through all this, oil imports slowed to a trickle and supplies ran short around the country, creating long lines and dry-outs at pumps. The dispute dragged on all through June as consumers jostled for space at the pumps. The oil industry held its ground that arranging fresh supplies under the notified price was not possible, while the government served up fines and hostile rhetoric. Negotiatio­ns swirled around measures to reform the pricing mechanism, but a consensus on current prices could not be hammered out.

It is no longer possible to see the events of the past month in the oil-marketing sector as anything other than gross mismanagem­ent by the government. Let's hope things return to normal now.

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