Business Standard

Pradhan sees no knee-jerk reaction on fuel price rise

Shares of OMCs fell sharply on worry that govt could ask them to absorb higher global prices

- SHINE JACOB

Share prices of the three government-owned oil marketing companies (OMCs) fell on Wednesday on pricing worries, which the government later said were baseless.

Reports suggested the three — Bharat Petroleum Corporatio­n (BPC), Hindustan Petroleum Corporatio­n (HPC) and Indian Oil Corporatio­n (IOC) — might be asked to absorb the recent global hike in crude oil prices. As a result, their share prices fell 6.2 per cent, 5.1 per cent and 4.3 per cent, respective­ly, on the BSE exchange.

The markets were worried on whether the government was going back to the regulated pricing era. However, after trading hours, petroleum minister Dharmendra Pradhan said the government would not ask state-run companies to absorb the price rise in petrol and diesel and would stay to market-driven pricing.

He added that a shift to the goods and services tax (GST) regime was the only way to have a transparen­t tax structure on fuel items.

“The government has no business to interfere in the day-to-day affairs of companies. We have linked product prices to the market and will stick to that,” said Pradhan. The minister added that global prices would ease very soon.

“A knee-jerk reaction is not required when we are following a formula. We expect prices to come down soon. This increase is mainly because of the cyclones that hit the US, which resulted in a decline of refining capacity by 13 per cent and an increase in diesel prices by 20 per cent and petrol by 18 per cent in the past three months,” he added.

Petrol prices were decontroll­ed in India in 2010, while diesel prices got market freedom in October 2014. On June 16 this year, the OMCs shifted to a daily pricing system. The criticism the government faces is that the tax components are 40-50 per cent in various states.

Asked if the ministry would request its finance counterpar­t to cut the excise duty on petrol and diesel, Pradhan said, “That is for the finance ministry to decide. Of the Central excise duty, too, 42 per cent share goes to states. However, we want the remaining petroleum products also to be under GST, as it is the only way to have a transparen­t tax structure.” Petrol and diesel have been excluded from the GST ambit.

The minister said spending on social sector schemes and infrastruc­ture projects had risen substantia­lly in the tenure of the present government. “The revenue from excise duty on fuel increased from ~99,000 crore in 2014-15 to ~2.42 lakh crore in 201617, which we were able to divert into welfare schemes,” he said.

The speculatio­n was that the government might intervene, after prices inched close to ~80 a litre in Mumbai and ~70.38 a litre in Delhi. The price of Brent crude was $54.65 a barrel at one time on Wednesday.

 ?? DHARMENDRA PRADHAN ?? ‘The government has no business to interfere in the day-to-day affairs of companies’ Petroleum Minister
DHARMENDRA PRADHAN ‘The government has no business to interfere in the day-to-day affairs of companies’ Petroleum Minister

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