The price hike announced on petrol, diesel and LPG is on expected lines and was unavoidable, said K V Kamath, president, CII, and CEO, ICICI Bank, in a press release issued in Mumbai on Wednesday.
The continued rise in global oil prices had necessitated this action from the government. CII in its earlier press release suggested that the increasing burden of oil prices should be spread out between the consumers through a moderate price hike, the government by reducing the indirect taxes on crude oil and petro-products and the oil marketing companies.
The reduction of customs duty and specific excise rate is a welcome measure and shows the government commitment to share the burden of increased global prices, said the CII president.
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Prior to this hike, fuel prices were last raised in India in February 2008 -- when oil prices hovered around $100 bbl -- after a gap of twenty months. Global prices have increased steeply in the past year, and the Indian oil basket now costs around $125 bbl.
It has been estimated that a 10 per cent sustained rise, if passed through, can add as much as 1.3 per cent to inflation. The impact of expanding subsidies could contribute an additional 2.5 per cent to fiscal deficit, said the CII release.
The government had a very difficult task at hand, said Kamath. "A situation of global slowdown, moderating growth in some sectors of the economy, stress on the fiscal deficit and high inflation in the domestic economy presented the government with a tough balancing act. We


