New Delhi: The Tuesday evening decision of the Government to raise excise duty levels on petrol and diesel by historic high levels has taken up tax component on retail price of auto fuels closer to 70 per cent level.
What this means is that the bulk of the retail price a common man pays to get fuel is tax and if government would not have targeted petrol and diesel to raise revenue every time there is a pressing need for it, the fuel prices in India today would have mirrored retail prices prevailing decades ago (in 2003) and closer to what consumers in oil rich countries in the Gulf pay.
With the May 4 decision of Delhi government to raise VAT on petrol and diesel to 30 per cent of price, the state tax rate on the two products has risen to Rs 16.44 and Rs 16.26 per litre, respectively.
Similarly, the Centre's decision on Tuesday to raise excise duties on petrol and diesel by Rs 10 and Rs 13 per litre, respectively had taken up the component of this tax on retail prices by Rs 32.98 on petrol and Rs 31.83 per litre on diesel.
So the total tax component (Centre and state in Delhi) is Rs 49.42 on petrol and Rs 48.09 on diesel. Compare this with the base price of the two products today and the tax load becomes clearly visible. The base price of petrol currently is mere Rs 17.96 a litre and diesel just Rs 18.49 a litre.
Together with central and state taxes, freight, dealers commission the petrol on Wednesday is priced at Rs 71.26 a litre in Delhi while diesel's current selling price stands at Rs 69.39 a litre.
"Auto fuels comprise 20-30 of revenue of state governments while it f orms a significant portion of excise revenue for states. As the fuel is still out of GST raising duties is easier for both the centre and states that target the product to raise revenue whenever their is an emergency. But high set price of fuel also adds inflationary pressure on the economy that would just not be right at this juncture when the country is fighting the coronavirus outbreak," said an oil sector analyst not willing to be named.
Global oil prices have been at unprecedented low levels since mid-March pavi ng the for steep cut in retail prices of petrol and diesel for Indian consumers as well. However, this has not happened as oil companies did not revise the price of two products since March 16, (50 days) as if anticipating duty increase by the government.
Government has now indicated that even with higher central duty, there would not be any increase in retail price of petrol and diesel. Oil companies have build enough buffer in last 50 days for this (to keep retail prices unchanged) by not revising pump prices and jacking up their marketing margins close to Rs 15-18 per litre. They will just sacrifice a portion of this unprecedented high levels of marketing margin by allowing no further increase in auto fuel prices.
(Subhash Narayan can be contacted at subhash.n@ians.in)
For all the latest News, Opinions and Views, download ummid.com App.
Select Language To Read in Urdu, Hindi, Marathi or Arabic.
Modi govt raises excise duty on petrol, diesel by historic levels
Journalist Rizwana Tabassum commits suicide, SP leader held
World Notices India’s Falling Image of Press Freedom
Also Read
Majority of Indians don't trust TV news channels, social media
Global Coronavirus cases surge past 3.5 million
Also read
Covid-19 infection jumps to 126,045 in Turkey, Istanbul under curfew
Maharashtra: 35 more succumb to Coronavirus; cases reach 14,541
Covid-19 cases in Rajasthan cross 3000 mark, Jaipur worst hit
Confirmed COVID-19 cases in India top 42,500 with 1,373 deaths
Coronavirus Update: More hotspots in Western than Eastern India
36 nurses deployed to Malegaon, wander whole night searching accommodation
Maharashtra Covid-19 death toll tops 521; total cases 12,296
Newborn among 231 Coronavirus cases detected in Tamil Nadu today
India Lockdown 3: 319 districts listed as green zones, 284 as orange, 130 as red zones
After Uddhav Thackeray's hints, MHA extends lockdown
Is India's honeymoon with the Gulf states getting over?
India’s Rhetorical Shift: Spanish Model and Muslim Game
Hate Muslims, Hate Islam India's Jan-Andolan has Resonance in Gulf Countries
PM Modi talks of 'unity' after backlash in Saudi, Kuwait, UAE over Islamophobic attacks