Government abolishes
duty on non-subsidized LPG cylinders
After the abolishing of
5% customs duty and 8% excise duty, consumer price in Delhi would come to Rs798
per 14.2 kg cylinder from current market price of Rs895 per cylinder
New Delhi: In marginal
relief to consumers, the Union Government on Friday abolished import and excise
duties on liquefied petroleum gas (LPG) cylinders they buy beyond the six per
annum quota of subsidised cooking gas, and asked state governments to subsidise
the requirements of households at their level, reports PTI.
The Indian government
had last week restricted supply of subsidised cooking gas to six per household
in a year. Any requirement beyond this was to be purchased at market price,
which currently works out to Rs895 per 14.2 kg cylinder.
After the abolishing of
5% customs duty and 8% excise duty, the consumer price in Delhi would come to
Rs798. Subsidised cooking gas (LPG) in Delhi is currently sold at Rs399 a
cylinder.
"Since some LPG
cylinders will not be subsidised, we have amended the notification for the
non-subsidised household LPG cylinders... customs and excise (on them) will be
zero", Finance Minister P Chidambaram told reporters.
Non-subsidised
commercial LPG cylinders, however, would continue to attract customs duty of 5%
and excise duty at 8%.
Taking a cue from the Congress
ruled states which have increased the number of subsidised cylinders to nine
per year, the Minister asked other states to follow suit.
"I welcome the
decision of certain state governments to subsidise three cylinders per year of
LPG in addition to six cylinders for which the subsidy would be borne by the
central government...I would commend all state governments to adopt such an
approach", he said.
The Minister also
welcomed the decision of the Bihar government to reduce VAT on diesel from 18
per cent to 16 per cent which would neutralise some of the impact of the Rs 5
price hike announced by the Centre last week. .
Earlier this week, the
Congress party had asked Chief Ministers of Congress-ruled states to increase
the number of subsidised LPG cylinders over and above the six already given by
the Centre.
Chidambaram said the
state governments collected about Rs1.12 lakh crore from excise, customs and
state VATs in the 2011-12 fiscal, while the states got a net of Rs79,571 crore.
"We are paying out
a huge subsidy on fuel... Therefore, it is not unreasonable to expect that some
part of the burden should be borne by the state government's too,"
Chidambaram said.
"I therefore
welcome the decision of certain state governments to subsidise three cylinders
per year of LPG in addition to six cylinders, of which the subsidy would be
borne by the central government," he added.
Trinamool, the second
largest constituent of UPA with 19 MPs, had asked the Centre to raise the cap
on supply of subsidised LPG to 24 cylinders a year.
The key UPA ally has
decided to withdraw support to the UPA government if their demands for roll
back of the major reforms decisions taken by the Central government were not
met.
Taking some bold
decisions, the government has hiked diesel price by Rs5 a litre and allowed
foreign investment in multi-brand retail, besides capping the number of
subsidised cylinders at six per year per family.
The government has
pegged its outgo on food, fuel and fertiliser subsidies in the 2012-13 fiscal
at over Rs1.79 lakh crore. Of this, oil subsidy was pegged was Rs43,580 crore
Soruce:MLF
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