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Business News/ Politics / Policy/  Petrol, diesel prices start rising again
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Petrol, diesel prices start rising again

Petrol prices in Delhi rise to ₹82.03 on Monday and diesel rates are hiked to ₹73.82 per litre

Petrol and diesel prices were cut by a minimum Rs 2.50 on October 5.Premium
Petrol and diesel prices were cut by a minimum Rs 2.50 on October 5.

New Delhi: Within a day of the one-off excise duty cut and PSUs subsidising fuel, petrol and diesel prices are on the rise again and have hit a three-week high. Petrol and diesel prices were cut by a minimum 2.50 on October 5 when the government’s only second cut in excise duty of 1.50 per litre and state-owned fuel retailers providing a Re 1 per litre subsidy came into effect. In BJP-ruled states, the reduction was higher as they matched the cut with a similar reduction local sales tax or VAT. But the prices were on the rise from the very next day. Petrol price was hiked by 18 paise a litre on October 6, 14 paise on Sunday and 21 paise on Monday, according to daily price notification issued by state-owned oil firms.

Petrol, which in Delhi was cut to 81.50 on October 5, on Monday costs 82.03. Diesel costs 73.82 per litre in Delhi, up from 72.95 on October 5, according to the oil firms.

Delhi, which did not cut VAT on fuel, still has the cheapest fuel in all metros and bulk of state capital as it levies lower taxes. Mumbai despite reducing VAT on petrol still has the highest priced fuel.

Petrol in Mumbai sells for 87.50 a litre on Sunday and diesel is priced at 77.37.

Petrol prices had hit an all-time high of 84 per litre in Delhi and 91.34 in Mumbai on October 4. Diesel rates too had peaked to 75.45 a litre in Delhi and 80.10 in Mumbai. Following the twin decision, they fell to 81.50 per litre of petrol in Delhi and 86.97 in Mumbai.

Diesel rates fell to 72.95 in Delhi and 77.45 in Mumbai on October 5.

On Monday, the rates hit a three-week high.

Private retailers like Nayara Energy, formerly known as Essar Oil, too are matching PSU rates by subsidising fuel by Re 1 a litre.

After the Centre cut excise duty by 1.50 per litre and asked PSU oil firms to subsidise fuel by Re 1, Maharashtra and Gujarat governments were among the first to announce a matching 2.50 cut.

They were later joined by Chhattisgarh, Jharkhand, Tripura, Uttar Pradesh, Madhya Pradesh, Himachal Pradesh, Haryana Assam, Uttarakhand, Goa and Arunachal Pradesh with similar moves. Jammu and Kashmir, which is under governor’s rule, too reduced tax on the two fuel.

Maharashtra, however, reduced VAT only on petrol and not on diesel.

Even before the excise duty cut, Rajasthan, West Bengal, Karnataka, Kerala and Andhra Pradesh had last month reduced VAT to cushion consumers for a spate of price increases.

The reduction in excise duty, only the second in four years of BJP-led NDA rule, will dent central government revenues by 10,500 crore and was aimed at cooling retail prices that had shot up to an all-time high.

The BJP-government at the Centre had raised excise duty on petrol by 11.77 a litre and that on diesel by 13.47 a litre in nine installments between November 2014 and January 2016 to shore up finances as global oil prices fell, but then cut the tax just once in October last year by 2 a litre.

Prior to Friday’s cut, petrol price had risen by 6.86 a litre and diesel by 6.73 since mid-August - the most in any six-week duration after the daily price revision was introduced in mid-June last year.

Industry sources said for state-owned fuel retailers absorbing Re 1 per litre price would mean a 9,000 crore hit on profits on an annualised basis. For the remainder of current fiscal, it would be 4,500 crore, with IOC’s share being roughly half and the rest is split equally between HPCL and BPCL.

Almost half of the fuel price is made up of taxes. The Centre, prior to the excise duty cur, levied a total of 19.48 per litre of excise duty on petrol and 15.33 per litre on diesel. On top of this, states levy value-added tax (VAT).

The hike in duties in 2014-16 had led to excise collections from petro goods rising from 99,184 crore in 2014-15 to 2,29,019 crore in 2017-18. States saw their VAT revenue rise from 1,37,157 crore in 2014-15 to 1,84,091 crore in 2017-18.

This story has been published from a wire agency feed without modifications to the text. Only the headline has been changed.

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Published: 07 Oct 2018, 03:17 PM IST
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