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Prime Minister hints at no fuel price rollback | Prime Minister Dr. Manmohan Singh on Monday hinted that his Government may not initiate a rollback on fuel prices, and said that the economy has the capacity to absorb the hike without setting any inflationary pressure.
"Well any increase in prices does hurt some people, but we have to take a long-term
route. We cannot save people from inflation if we follow all along populist fiscal
policies," Dr. Singh said. "Sooner or later these populist policies if persisted
for the long time to come will lead to the erosion of the investment climate and
will lead to erode the capacity to create new jobs. It will lead to the erosion
of our ability to invest in our flagship programmes for the poor people," he added.
The Prime Minister reckons that the direct effect on the wholesale price index
(WPI) will be no more than O.4 percent. "There may be some escalations, but my
hope is now that the rabi crop is coming into the market, prices which has caused
the great degree of concern (wheat, sugar and pulses) will see some moderation,"
Dr. Singh said. The Prime Minister's comments on the fuel price came a day after
Finance Minister Pranab Mukherjee said that he was open to discussing differences
on the fuel price hike with the United Progressive Alliance (UPA) allies- the
Trinamool Congress and the Dravida Munnettra Kazhagam (DMK)- who have appealed
to the Prime Minister and to UPA chairperson Sonia Gandhi to consider a reversal.
In an interview to a leading daily, Mukherjee said that the fuel price hike of
Rs. 2.71 on petrol and Rs. 2.55 on diesel, announced in 2010-11 budget could be
revisited, but did not say when. "These (objections to the fuel price hike) are
a political prospective. Our capability of reducing the cost of production is
not relevant. Whatever the pricing ruling in the international market are, you
will have to get it," Mukhejee said. India imports 80 percent of its crude oil
requirements, the prices of which had shot up to 147 dollars/barrel in June 2008,
and have now stabilized at around 80 dollars/barrel. Rising inflation, particularly
food inflation, has sparked street protests and put political pressure on the
Congress-led government to find a solution without hurting economic recovery.
Petrol prices rose about six percent and diesel prices by 7.75 percent after the
government increased factory-gate taxes and import duties on the fuels as part
of last week's General Budget for 2010-11. The government has announced a hike
in excise duty on petrol by one rupee. |
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