RBI Calls for Immediate Hike in Prices of Petro Products
OREANDA-NEWS. May 04, 2011. With rising crude oil prices widening the gap between the retail fuel price and their cost of production, the Reserve Bank of
Releasing the Monetary Policy Statement for 2011-12, he added that the failure to increase retail prices would increase the government’s fiscal deficit. The government has not allowed state oil firms to revise diesel prices since June last year when crude oil was ruling at USD 72-73 per barrel. Crude oil is today trading at over USD
Diesel prices will need to be hiked by over Rs. 18 per litre if retail prices are to be brought at international parity and the June, 2010, decision of freeing its prices from government control is implemented. Also, the government has not allowed oil firms to hike the price of petrol, a commodity which was freed from control in June last year. Petrol is currently being undersold by Rs. 8.50 per litre.
In addition, domestic LPG and kerosene, too, are sold at an artificially lower price. Unchanged prices of diesel, domestic LPG and kerosene would mean that the government will have to find ways to meet the over Rs. 1,80,000 crore revenue loss projected for the current fiscal. Mr. Subbarao said the currently prevailing high crude and commodity prices have been taken into account while projecting the 8 per cent GDP growth for this fiscal.
“Going forward, high oil and other commodity prices and the impact of the RBI’s anti-inflationary monetary stance will moderate growth,” he said. The RBI said that it has arrived at an 8 per cent projection for GDP growth by factoring in international crude prices at an average of USD 110 per barrel for the full 2011-12 fiscal year.
Mr. Subbarao said the rising commodity prices are going to affect all the emerging economies. In its report, the central bank admitted that global crude prices remain volatile. “The outlook for crude oil prices in the near future is uncertain given the geopolitical situation in the
The recent conflict in
Inflation has stood above 8 per cent since January, 2010, and the RBI said that it is likely to average 9 per cent during the first half of the current fiscal, before moderating to around 6 per cent in March, 2012.
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