fuel prices | SabrangIndia News Related to Human Rights Thu, 25 Nov 2021 10:50:10 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.2.2 https://sabrangindia.in/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/Favicon_0.png fuel prices | SabrangIndia 32 32 To tomato or not to tomato? That is no longer the question https://sabrangindia.in/tomato-or-not-tomato-no-longer-question/ Thu, 25 Nov 2021 10:50:10 +0000 http://localhost/sabrangv4/2021/11/25/tomato-or-not-tomato-no-longer-question/ The massive surge in vegetable prices is being blamed on crop damage caused by the recent rains and high fuel prices

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Tomatoes Hoarders
Image Courtesy:economictimes.indiatimes.com

Delhi’s Food & Civil Supplies Minister Imran Hussain has ordered a “crackdown against Tomatoes hoarders”. Nope, that is not an error, the fruit/ vegetable, much loved by cooks and consumers has not become the new onion, as in the centre of the political discourse around rising vegetable prices this season. It is said to be retailing at around or over Rs 150 for a kilogram in some parts of the country and in Delhi is selling around Rs 100.

Hussain has also directed the Food and Civil Supplies Department to send a daily inspection report after a meeting was held yesterday after the “sudden and undue increase in the retail prices of tomato in the markets of Delhi,” and was attended by the Delhi’s Commissioner, Food and Civil Supplies (CFS), Joint Commissioner and senior officers of the intelligence team of Food and Civil Supplies Department. It also reviewed the “price trend of onion, potato and other essential commodities”. The minister directed that “intelligence teams should also gather information about instances of hoarding and/ or black marketing of tomatoes, if any, so that the concerned departments could initiate necessary action against them under the Essential Commodity Act.”

According to a report in India Today, this “price rise has been greater in southern states, where vegetable prices have gone up by an average of 40 per cent.” This reason is reportedly “extensive crop damage caused by the recent rains.” Tomato and other vegetable prices are soaring in Andhra Pradesh, Madhya Pradesh, Maharashtra, Tamil Nadu, even Uttar Pradesh in the North. 

The other reason is the surge in fuel prices. According to a report in Livemint, the rise in fuel costs “directly impacts the price of vegetables and prices of vegetables, especially tomato and okra, have witnessed a sharp rise in the past one month in the wholesale and retail markets here.” Adil Ahmad Khan, chairman of the Agricultural Produce Marketing Committee (APMC) of Azadpur Mandi, told the media, “The price of almost all green vegetables is more than what it was in the previous month. Tomato that was selling for Rs 33.5 per kg last month is now selling at  ₹44.25, while the price of okra has increased to Rs 35 per kg from Rs 15 last month.” 

Tomato, the new yardstick was retailing at nearly Rs 160 per kilo in Chennai, followed by Rs 130 per kilo in parts of Andhra Pradesh and in the range of Rs 90-120 in Karnataka. In Maharashtra, including Mumbai, the price of tomato has jumped sharply to Rs 100 per kilo, stated news reports.
 

On Wednesday, petrol in Delhi cost Rs 103.97 per litre, and diesel cost Rs 86.67 per litre. The report quoted retail prices “between Rs 90 to Rs 108, and Rs100 to Rs 120 for one kg of tomato and okra, respectively.” According to SP Gupta, former APMC chairman of Ghazipur Mandi, the skyrocketing vegetable prices may only ease with the arrival of new crops in the market. “There was little to no supply from neighbouring cities like Haryana and Uttar Pradesh.The tomato that we are getting is coming from as far as Shivpruri in Madhya Pradesh or Shimla. In fact, our supply from Bangalore is also not coming through,” he was quoted in the news report.
 

According to India today, data from the Department of Consumer Affairs suggests that “the all-India average monthly price of potato is at a 10-month high and onion price is at a nine-month high.” It warns that the price of staple vegetables like tomato, onions and potatoes will increase further due to elevated diesel prices.

The petrol prices per litre breached the century mark per litre across many metros in August. It was not the fuel price alone that is burning a hole in the pockets of common citizens. In the past year and a half, prices of several essential items have shot up drastically. Grocery store owners said their hands were tied because they were having to buy stuff from wholesalers and distributors at a much higher rate than before, suggesting hoarding. Added to this, the slowing down of the economy, unemployment, job cuts, salary cuts & the Covid-19 pandemic all make it a bitter pill to swallow for the citizen. 

Meanwhile, in Tamil Nadu, the State Cooperative Department has announced that it will procure vegetables and sell them in cooperative stores at an affordable price. Cooperative Minister I Periyasamy told the media that in these stores, “tomatoes will be sold at Rs 85-100 per kg, compared to Rs 110-130 in the open market”. The subsidised vegetables will be sold in Chennai, Coimbatore, Madurai, Tiruchy, Salem, and Vellore, among other districts. 

Related:

Rising fuel prices: Gov’t tries to obfuscate the truth… again! 
India’s dairy farmers face another harsh summer – but not because of the heat

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Rising fuel prices: Gov’t tries to obfuscate the truth… again! https://sabrangindia.in/rising-fuel-prices-govt-tries-obfuscate-truth-again/ Wed, 18 Aug 2021 10:38:12 +0000 http://localhost/sabrangv4/2021/08/18/rising-fuel-prices-govt-tries-obfuscate-truth-again/ The timing of the recent moves to raise levies and retail prices by the governments and fuel marketers, respectively, is at odds with logic, especially at a point when the country is grappling with the impact of a pandemic

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Fuel PriceImage Courtes:haribhoomi.com

The petrol prices per litre have breached the century mark per litre across many metros recently. It is not the fuel price alone that is burning a hole in the pockets of common citizens. In the past year and a half, prices of several essential items have shot up drastically so much so that tens of thousands of households have their backs to the wall. Grocery store owners said their hands were tied because they were having to buy stuff from wholesalers and distributors at a much higher rate than before, suggesting hoarding. Added to this, the slowing down of the economy, unemployment, job cuts, salary cuts & the Covid-19 pandemic all make it a bitter pill to swallow for the citizen. How will our economy reach the five trillion-dollar milestone & be a Vishwaguru is in itself a million-dollar question. 

On the face of it, the Oil Manufacturing Companies’ decision to resume daily price resetting would appear to be in broad conformity with the pricing deregulation that the Centre has been intermittently committed to ever since the government of the day freed up petrol prices in 2010. However, the timing of the recent moves to raise levies and retail prices by the governments and fuel marketers, respectively, is at odds with logic especially at a point when the country is grappling with the impact of a pandemic. The aim of maximising takings from fuel products to offset shortfalls in other revenue streams can only bear fruit if the petrol and diesel off-take remain unaffected and the rising fuel bill does not end up depleting household consumption budgets. The lockdowns imposed to contain the spread of COVID-19 having severely hit business activity at all levels, the onus is on the governments — both at the Centre and in the States — to facilitate the resumption of economic activity in every manner possible. Given that diesel is the primary fuel for the vast and essential road freight sector, every incremental addition to haulage costs ends up dampening both the transport industry and wider economic revival.

How are fuel prices computed in India?

India meets its domestic oil demand mainly through imports. Fuel prices in India are revised daily based on the changing crude oil prices globally. As global crude oil prices go up, the import cost also increases. But that’s just one reason for the high retail prices. The remainder of the amount is just state and central government taxes. A major reason for the high selling price of petrol is the high levy of local taxes. The Union government levies excise duty and cess on fuel, and states levy a value added tax (VAT).

In 2010, the prices of petrol were determined by the government and were revised every fortnight. In 2014 the price of diesel was also deregulated and since 2017 prices are being revised on a daily basis. Since then, the public sector Oil Marketing Companies make decisions on the pricing of petrol and diesel based on international product prices, exchange rate, tax structure, inland freight and other cost elements, according to a response in the parliament. Some state-run companies such as Indian Oil Corporation Limited Bharat Petroleum Corporation Limited and Hindustan Petroleum Corporation Limited fix retail prices of petrol and diesel in the country.

There are mainly four factors that influence the hike in fuel prices. These are (a) Crude oil, freight and processing charges to the dealer. (b) Excise duty charged by the government. (c) Dealer commission to the gas station. (d) Value Added Tax levied by the state government.

India imports about 82% of the required crude oil for its petroleum products. Crude oil is a dark sticky liquid that cannot be used without refining. It is heated until it boils and is then separated into different liquids and gases in a distillation column. This is used to make petrol and diesel. While Brent Crude is the international benchmark price used by the Organisation of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC), West Texas Intermediate is the benchmark for United States oil prices. Since India mainly imports crude oil from OPEC countries, (Iraq, Iran, Kuwait, Saudi Arabia and Venezuela) Brent is the benchmark for oil prices in India. Brent crude is extracted from the North Sea of the Atlantic Ocean whereas West Texas Intermediate is usually extracted from US oil fields in Texas, Louisiana and North Dakota.

Worldwide taxes are levied on fuel. The following figure explains this:

Fuel
At present India has the highest percentage of tax on both petrol & diesel making it one of the nations with the highest dose of taxation. Taxes now comprise over 69 per cent of the pump price of the two fuels. The following table shows the value of US dollar vs. Indian rupee since May 2014.

Year (Month)

US dollar

2014(15th May)

59.44

2014(12th Sept)

60.95

2015(15th Apr)

62.30

2015(15th May)

64.22

2015(19th Sept)

65.87

2015(30th Nov)

66.79

2016(20th Jan)

68.01

2016(25th Jan)

67.63

2016(25th Feb)

68.82

2016(14th Apr)

66.56

2016(22nd Sept)

67.02

2016(24th Nov)

67.63

2017(28th Mar)

65.04

2017(28th Apr)

64.27

2017(15th May)

64.05

2017(14th Aug)

64.13

2017(24th Oct)

64.94

2018(9th May)

64.80

2018(Oct)

74.00

2019(Oct)

70.85

2020(Jan)

70.96

2020(Dec)

73.78

2021(Jan)

74.57

Source: Thomas Cook website(https://blog.thomascook.in/1-usd-to-inr-from-1947-to-2020/)

The value of the Indian rupee is largely related to crude oil prices. As oil price increases, the value of Indian currency also decreases, and vice versa. The withdrawal of foreign investors from the Indian market is another contributing factor. Government debts can cause investors to lose interest in the country’s market, resulting in inflation. Factors like these may combine with several others to cause further depreciation of the INR in the future.

Now we compare the international crude oil prices per barrel which is given in the table below for the same period:

Oil price
Source:(https://www.opec.org/opec_web/en/data_graphs/40.htm)

The comparative prices of petrol in some of the countries are shown in the figure below:

Price of Petrol
But it is disconcerting that over the three weeks ending June 23, 2014, the spot price of Brent Sea crude rose from around $100 a barrel to more than $115 a barrel. At present, the price of crude oil is $71.32 a barrel. The month wise price of Indian basket crude oil & the retail selling price of petrol and diesel at Delhi during 2014 are given in the table below:

2014

Indian basket crude oil ($/bbl)

Petrol (Rs per litre)

Diesel (Rs per litre)

May, 2014

106.85

72.26

55.49

June, 2014

109.05

72.26

57.28

July, 2014

106.30

73.60

57.84

August, 2014

101.89

72.51

58.40

September, 2014

96.96

68.51

58.97

October, 2014

86.83

67.86

58.97

November, 2014

77.58

64.24

53.35

December, 2014

61.21

63.33

52.51

Source: (Reply to RS unstarred question-1090 answered on 4th March 2015 on “Comparative prices of crude oil in 2009 & 2014)-(https://pib.gov.in/newsite/PrintRelease.aspx?relid=116436)

The table below shows the retail selling price of petrol & diesel in Delhi during 2015-16 to 2020-2021 as given by the Petroleum Planning & Analysis Cell. (https://www.ppac.gov.in/). The cut-off date for each year is April 1.

Year

Petrol (Rs per litre)

Diesel (Rs per litre)

2015

60.49

49.71

2016

59.68

48.33

2017

66.29

55.61

2018

73.73

64.58

2019

72.86

66.09

2020

69.59

62.29

2021

90.56

80.87

The ordinary citizen will surely then wonder how the retail price of petrol has hit the century mark. The aforesaid tables show a different picture altogether. The fuel prices in the domestic market were supposed to fall as a result. But they are skyrocketing. This is because of the governments’ unscientific taxation policy. At present, petroleum products are under excise duty & VAT. The following table shows the breakup of both petrol & diesel price in Delhi (source: IOC website) that will make the above point clear.

Ordinary Citizens

Ordinary Citizens

The excise duty for a litre of petrol has risen from ₹9.48 a litre during the previous regime to ₹32.90 a litre in the present regime. The excise duty for diesel has risen from ₹3.56 a litre to ₹31.81 a litre in the same period. The present regime is misleading citizens by saying it has to pay for the oil bonds of the previous regime. The exorbitant rise of taxes is the primary reason for the skyrocketing fuel prices in the domestic market despite a steep fall of crude oil prices in the international market. If taxation is rationalised, the fuel prices would automatically come down. The cess was meant to be used for the development of the oil sector, but this never happened. If the funds had been used for the stabilisation of prices, the recent hike could have been avoided.  In practice, petroleum products are produced in refineries in India. One can understand the case for aligning Indian crude oil prices to international prices because 82% per cent of our requirement is imported. But there is no case for applying this method to oil refining, in which India is more than self-reliant (in fact, private companies such as Reliance export petroleum products). The opposition parties have been highlighting the fact that the whole point in promoting self-reliance is to establish entities in India to act as countervailing forces that would insulate the country from high prices in the global markets. If the current pricing system continues, even if India is completely self-reliant in crude oil and refined products, the consumer would still have to pay prices that are determined globally, even if the cost of production in India is lower. This is the biggest anomaly in the system that prevails, after the dismantling of the APM. In fact, this system is loaded against self-reliance. Even when a downward trend in international fuel prices had been observed, the benefit was never passed on to the people. It was neutralised by a higher incidence of indirect taxation, at both the Central and State levels. The ability of State governments to manoeuvre is far less than that of the Centre. The oil price hike has burdened the already strained State finances and threatens to jeopardise welfare programmes run by State governments.

In a reply to an unstarred question no-4309 in the Lok Sabha on March 22, 2021, the government had to reveal the amounts in tax collection on petrol, diesel & gas as a percentage of the Gross Tax Revenue Budget Estimates; figures show how this has increased. The year wise collection from 2013-14 to January 2021 are given below contained in the annexure to the reply in Parliament:

Petrol

Conclusion

While income has not gone up, expenses have shot through the roof in hundreds of thousands of Indian households. A family which spent an average Rs 2,500 per month on groceries before the pandemic is now spending Rs 4000 per month. A litre of edible mustard oil which was sold for Rs 120 has now crossed Rs 200. Such a surge in prices has impacted the buying pattern of people as well. The price rise has hit harder because the virus has robbed many of their income and stalled the income of many more. The freezing of central government employees & pensioners dearness allowance given to offset the hike in prices has also added to the overall misery. High prices are also expected to inflate India’s current account deficit. In some States such as Kerala, trawler boat owners once engaged in deep-sea fishing are staring at a bleak future with the price of diesel going continually up and loss of significant number of fishing days owing to COVID-19 restrictions. The steep rise in the price of diesel too has been a big drag on fishing operations. An analysis of LPG hike will be taken up in a separate article.

Some crucial suggestions are being offered for bringing down the fuel prices. One is that the Central government reduce excise duty and also rationalise taxes on petroleum products. Two, the State governments reduce VAT. (Recently Government of Tamil Nadu reduced the price of petrol by three rupees per litre). Three, petroleum products should be brought under GST framework: with the establishment of a price stabilisation fund that can be funded by a cess for every tonne on the oil-prospecting companies like ONGC or Oil India.

The previous government had the vision to start the Indian Strategic Petroleum Reserves Limited (ISPRL)(http://www.isprlindia.com/) in 2005 to maintain crude oil stock. The present regime is not using this even while the oil prices are rising. There are about 55 lakh metric tonnes of crude oil stocked at the ISPRL facilities. It is both strange and questionable why the present regime has not released this stock despite the oil prices going sky high.

Related:

Democracy, anyone?

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Mamata Banerjee rides electric scooty to protest rising fuel prices https://sabrangindia.in/mamata-banerjee-rides-electric-scooty-protest-rising-fuel-prices/ Thu, 25 Feb 2021 12:54:52 +0000 http://localhost/sabrangv4/2021/02/25/mamata-banerjee-rides-electric-scooty-protest-rising-fuel-prices/ Calling the central government “anti-people,” Banerjee said the BJP government only made false promises, while the price of petrol and diesel rose by the day

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Image Courtesy:economictimes.indiatimes.com

Helmet-clad and placard adorned West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee rode pillion on an electric scooter on February 25, 2021 to lead a rally against rising fuel prices, reported The Indian Express. Sitting behind State Minister and Kolkata Mayor Firhad Hakim, Banerjee travelled 5 kms from Hazra More to the state secretariat in Nabanna, where she slammed the central government for making false promises about fuel prices.

“We are protesting the fuel price hike. The Modi government only makes false promises. They have done nothing to bring down fuel prices. You can see the difference in petrol prices when the Modi government came to power and now,” she told media persons.

The Chief Minister went on to say that Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Union Home Minister Amit Shah will “sell the country” with their “anti-people government.”

Petrol and diesel prices in West Bengal rose to Rs 91.12 per litre and Rs 84.20 per litre, respectively. Meanwhile, LPG, cylinder prices increased to Rs. 25 on Thursday changing state prices of LPG cylinders Rs. 820 per litre from Rs 795 per litre. To alleviate people’s burden, the state government announced a reduction of tax by Rs. 1 per liter on petrol and diesel on February 21, effective midnight.

In response, the Union government said that oil retailers in India were forced to increase prices because global crude oil prices rose by more than 50 percent to over $63.3 per barrel since October.

According to the Scroll, the government has failed to restore taxes that are record high while global rates rebounded with a pick-up in demand.

Related:

Battleground Bengal: Communal hues grow darker
TN petrol pump offers free petrol to combat rising prices and promote Tamil culture
Is there Social Justice in the Digital Economy?
Will a Rs 6,000 annual dole lure Bengal’s fisherfolk?

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Opinion: Now we know why Kashmir is in turmoil https://sabrangindia.in/opinion-now-we-know-why-kashmir-turmoil/ Tue, 06 Nov 2018 06:52:45 +0000 http://localhost/sabrangv4/2018/11/06/opinion-now-we-know-why-kashmir-turmoil/ Petty things like the price of petrol, lack of jobs, insignificant fatalities among national sewers, mass rapes in shelter homes, gratuitously suicidal farmers, collapsed small enterprises, Institutions that brazenly insist on being autonomous, and such like, insist on hogging media spaces to the detriment of the larger national interest Dar Yasin/Associated Press    For donkey’s […]

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Petty things like the price of petrol, lack of jobs, insignificant fatalities among national sewers, mass rapes in shelter homes, gratuitously suicidal farmers, collapsed small enterprises, Institutions that brazenly insist on being autonomous, and such like, insist on hogging media spaces to the detriment of the larger national interest

Kashmir
Dar Yasin/Associated Press 
 
For donkey’s years, a plethora of ‘think tanks’ and sundry Kashmir watchers have tried to figure out why the state of Jammu & Kashmir is in turmoil. Alas to little effect.
 
But now we know! There is no Hindu King there anymore. Coming, as this insight does, from the near-Hindu King of India’s largest state, this must give us pause to review all our mistaken assessments of the imbroglio.
 
You may well ask, why that aforesaid largest state is itself in not such good shape, despite its good fortune in having a near-Hindu King, or why the national realm at large should be so fraught with contentions, notwithstanding the rule by a Hindu Hriday Samrat. However idle and motivated those queries might be, the answer is not far to seek: put simply, there are still residues of western-style, Nehruvian democracy prevalent; whose systems of checks, balances, due processes, and other debilitating libertarian apparatuses continue to thwart the pristine and wholesome reach of Hindu monarchy. Wretchedly also, petty things like the price of petrol, lack of jobs, insignificant fatalities among national sewers, mass rapes in shelter homes, gratuitously suicidal farmers, collapsed small enterprises, Institutions that brazenly insist on being autonomous, and such like, insist on hogging media spaces to the detriment of the larger national interest. Nor are targeted social contentions yet quite adequate to exterminating these and other obstacles to the untrammelled royalty whose unchallenged edicts alone can bring peace and prosperity to India, that is Bharat, although not for want of trying hard.
 
The larger problem of course is that which dear Donald Trump, doyen of kingly nationalists, never fails to flag tweet after tweet, byte after byte; till such time as certain wrong types of the human species persist in proliferating and making injurious claims to legitimacy, nation after nation, aided and abetted by permissive Constitutionalaties, no Christian or Hindu monarch may have full control of a future of monochromatic purity. What perplexes the royal imagination bolstered by godliness is the question as to why God should have thought it fit to give us “God’s own variety of creatures” rather than just one undifferentiated type wherein there would be one mind and no argument. Clearly, God must be made to answer to this lapse; how, only Trump and Yogi Adityanath may further enlighten us.
 
Meanwhile, having underscored the roots of the Kashmir problem, all nationalists’ heads must be put together to find a way to reinstall the Hindu monarchy.
 
For a start, statewide, even country-wide, prayers, jagrans, kirtans may be initiated on state expense to persuade devis and devtas to intervene in the matter.
 
More things are wrought by prayer than by politics, especially of the pernicious democratic variety.
 
Professor Badri Raina taught English literature at Delhi University for four decades. He has several collections of poems, essays and translations to his credit. He is the author of books like ‘Dickens and the Dialectic of Growth’, ‘The Underside of Things: India and the World’, ‘Kashmir: A Noble Tryst in Tatters,’ and more.
 

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Cut in Petrol/Diesel Prices – Are You Joking Mr Jaitley? https://sabrangindia.in/cut-petroldiesel-prices-are-you-joking-mr-jaitley/ Fri, 05 Oct 2018 05:41:37 +0000 http://localhost/sabrangv4/2018/10/05/cut-petroldiesel-prices-are-you-joking-mr-jaitley/ After increasing prices by 25% in the past 15 months, a cut of 3% is nothing but a desperate stunt that fools nobody.     Petrol and diesel prices will be reduced by Rs.2.50 per litre each, Finance Minister Arun Jaitley announced at a press conference on Thursday  in Delhi. He urged states to match […]

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After increasing prices by 25% in the past 15 months, a cut of 3% is nothing but a desperate stunt that fools nobody.

Fuel prices
 
Petrol and diesel prices will be reduced by Rs.2.50 per litre each, Finance Minister Arun Jaitley announced at a press conference on Thursday  in Delhi. He urged states to match this with a similar Rs.2.50 cut in their share of taxes. So far, Kerala and Delhi have refused to do so, while six BJP-ruled states have agreed.

Have a look at the charts below – it shows the great cut in prices in perspective. These are based on daily data maintained by the Petroleum Planning & Analysis Cell (PPAC) under the oil ministry.

Petrol%20Prices.png

Diesel%20Price.png

Last year, the government switched over to daily price fixing of these two fuels. At that time, petrol was being sold at Rs.65.48 per litre and diesel at Rs.54.32/litre.

On October 4, after the Rs.2.50 cut, the rates are: petrol – Rs.81.50 and diesel Rs.72.95 per litre! In other words they are about 24% higher than they were in June 2017. The great cut announced by Mr.Jaitley amounts to a measly 3% of the cost it was selling at.

India’s retail oil prices are made up of the cost at which oil is imported plus excise, VAT and dealers’ commission. As per Indian Oil Corporation, on October1,  2018, the price being charged to dealers was Rs.42.79 per litre of petrol and Rs.46.22 per litre of diesel. The rest of it is all taxes, with a small amount (Rs.3.66 for petrol and Rs.2.52 for diesel) going as dealers’ commission.

In other words, it is the government. which has been reaping enormous profits from the sale of petrol and diesel. It is estimated by PPAC that in 2017-18, the petroleum sector contributed a staggering Rs.3.44 lakh crore to the Centre’s treasury through these taxes and dividends. The contribution to state exchequers was another Rs.2.09 lakh crore. The total amount is a mind boggling Rs.5.5 lakh crore – all through jacking up prices of petrol and diesel even though international prices were low.

The Modi government has failed to raise resources by taxing the rich. It has allowed corporate bodies to abscond with lakhs of crore rupees worth of bank loans. It has sold national assets to private entities. It has privatised various services to benefit them. Yet when it comes to giving some relief to the common persons, it has been callously obstinate, refusing any cuts in prices of essential commodities like oil.

And, now Mr. Jaitley announces a cut of Rs.2.50 as if it is a great concession and relief to the public. You must be joking Mr.Jaitley, right?

Courtesy: Newsclick.in

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Fuel Prices: The Truth Behind Modi Govt’s Lies https://sabrangindia.in/fuel-prices-truth-behind-modi-govts-lies/ Wed, 12 Sep 2018 06:14:18 +0000 http://localhost/sabrangv4/2018/09/12/fuel-prices-truth-behind-modi-govts-lies/ During Modi’s rule, the price of oil imported by India fell by 32% yet central taxes were hiked by 129%. Protesters shout anti-government slogans in the eastern city of Kolkata   The BJP government at the Centre, led by Prime Minister Narendra Modi, who likes to refer to himself as the pradhan sevak, is brazenly […]

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During Modi’s rule, the price of oil imported by India fell by 32% yet central taxes were hiked by 129%.
Protesters shout anti-government slogans in the eastern city of Kolkata
 
The BJP government at the Centre, led by Prime Minister Narendra Modi, who likes to refer to himself as the pradhan sevak, is brazenly trying to fool the people of the country on the issue of petrol and diesel prices. After the Bharat Bandh of September 10, called by 21 Opposition parties that saw widespread support across the country, one central minister came out with the spurious argument that fuel prices in India are rising because international crude prices are rising.

But the truth is something else. For three years straight after the Modi government took over power in May 2014, the price of crude oil in the Indian basket fell from $109.05 per barrel in June 2014 to $46.56 per barrel in June 2017. After that, it has risen to end up at $73.83 per barrel in June 2018. This is according to official data put out by the Petroleum Planning & Analysis Cell (PPAC) under the Ministry of Petroleum and Natural Gas. So, in four years, the price has actually dipped by about 32% since the Modi government took over. The Indian basket is a mix of two types of crude oil that India imports.

Crude Oil - Indian Prices

But there is more. The colossal deception that the Modi government’s spin-masters are trying to peddle is further exposed by the fact that international crude oil prices have little to do with what the Indian consumer pays. It is the taxes that are killing people.
About 46% of what the common consumer pays for petrol is made up of taxes charged by both, the Central as well as the state governments.

As shown in the charts, in 2014-15, the Modi government was making some Rs.1,22,200 crore out of taxes that it levied on oil. By 2017-18, this has zoomed up to Rs.2,80,000 crore! That is an increase of a staggering 129%. According to some estimates, the Central government has collected over Rs.11 lakh crore worth of taxes in this period riding on this bonanza.

The Myth of State Taxes
The ruling BJP has also been propagating the myth that it is state governments that are actually responsible for the rising prices of oil. There has been a 32% increase in state taxes during the past four years. But all the states put together collect some Rs.1,86,000 crore in taxes on fuel compared with the Centre’s cut of Rs.2,80,000 crore. And, in any case, the BJP is ruling in 21 states, as their leaders never tire of reminding us. Only recently has one of its state governments – in Rajasthan – reduced the state tax, because it is facing a tough Assembly election in a few months.

Another deception that the central BJP govt. is attempting to propagate is that higher tax revenues are good for the states and the people because all the money collected in the tax kitty goes for the benefit of the people. It is also argued that central tax collections are shared with states and so, higher tax earnings will benefit state govts.

Centre State Taxes on Petroleum Fuels like Petrol and Diesel

This would be true if the BJP government was actually spending money for the benefit of the people. But, in fact, there have been cutbacks in almost all central welfare schemes over the years of Modi rule with paucity of resources being cited as the reason. So, the Centre doesn’t seem to be redirecting the money earned from oil taxes to any public good.

On the other side, corporate houses have been indiscriminately given loans which they are now refusing to return. Such bad loans – given from public money collected through taxes – have reached over Rs.10 lakh crore, as per Reserve Bank of India. There are many such cases of corporate houses and cronies of the government/ruling party being given massive handouts from the public exchequer. In fact, the government has been selling off national assets, like the public sector units, to private entities. The Modi government can hardly be said to have used tax revenues for the people in any fair or inclusive manner.

What the sordid saga of oil prices shows is that the Modi government has actually been extorting money from farmers, workers and other common people of the country in order to satisfy the greedy appetites of corporate houses and big landowners. Oil and its products (petrol, diesel, kerosene, etc.) are used not just by the rich or middle classes. It is essential for irrigation, for transport of agricultural commodities and finished goods and for cooking fuels. Increasing prices directly as well as indirectly (through price rise of other commodities) rob the people of their hard-earned money. No amount of lies by BJP will assuage the anger felt by the people at this daylight robbery.

Courtesy: Newsclick.in

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Hike in Fuel Prices: Petrol Prices Set to Reach All-Time High https://sabrangindia.in/hike-fuel-prices-petrol-prices-set-reach-all-time-high/ Mon, 21 May 2018 05:44:27 +0000 http://localhost/sabrangv4/2018/05/21/hike-fuel-prices-petrol-prices-set-reach-all-time-high/ Rising fuel prices and accompanying inflation set to bring further woe to Indian consumers.   Fuel prices have borne witness to steady hikes in the last five days. In the national capital, the price of petrol has reached Rs.75.61, whereas the all-time high is Rs.76.06. In Mumbai, the price has reached Rs 83.45 as opposed […]

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Rising fuel prices and accompanying inflation set to bring further woe to Indian consumers.
Fuel prices
 
Fuel prices have borne witness to steady hikes in the last five days. In the national capital, the price of petrol has reached Rs.75.61, whereas the all-time high is Rs.76.06. In Mumbai, the price has reached Rs 83.45 as opposed to the all-time high of Rs.83.62.
The all-time high petrol prices were reached in 2013, when the price of crude oil was about $112 a barrel; today the price of crude oil is about $72 a barrel.

International oil prices had begun descending since July 2014 – the period post the previous all-time high. The Modi government, which came to power in 2014 itself, instead of transferring the benefits of the reduction in prices then, decided to exploit the opportunity by using it to increase revenue and reduce the fiscal deficit.

The government had achieved this by hiking excise duty on auto fuels. This was done repeatedly, with the result being that that the majority of the benefit from falling international oil prices accruing to the government rather than the consumers. In the period from November 2014 to January 2016, excise duty on petrol and diesel was hiked nine times, totalling Rs.11.7 on petrol and Rs.13.47 on diesel. Similar practices were continued, and a Newsclick report in 2017 showed that the result of this was a doubling of the government’s tax revenue from petroleum products as a percentage of GDP.

With the rise in international oil prices, the country’s crude oil import bill is also expected to rise. An Economic Times report citing an Oil Ministry report expects the import bill to surge by 20 per cent in the financial year 2018-19. This can also disrupt the government’s fiscal math by requiring higher subsidies on petroleum. The accompanied fall in the rupee’s exchange rate will also affect the price of imports.

The rising oil prices will also affect the Indian economy through inflation. The price of oil, being a major input to the economy, can influence the economy and the resulting inflation would bring down the real disposable income of households and inflict further woe upon consumers.

Though the government had not been transferring the benefits of falling international prices to the consumer in the past and also not stemming hikes, for the 19 days prior to the Karnataka legislative assembly elections, the oil marketing companies brought about no hikes in the fuel prices. Now, for the past five days since the election, there have been daily hikes in the prices.

This latest price hike, which may bring prices to an all-time high and bring distress to consumers, comes at a time when there is already dissatisfaction with the NDA government’s policies. The country has been bearing witness to many protests by the farmers, workers and youth over the government’s economic policies, and the hike in prices can only bring about further agitation.

Courtesy: Newsclick.in

 

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