Rates of many government services like issue of passport, public works, patents, security and copyright may go up soon, as their administrative ministries have agreed to the finance ministry's suggestion of increasing the user charges for such services.
The idea was to maximise non-tax revenue from services, which comprise about half of the total non-tax revenue of Rs 1,25,435 crore (Rs 1,254.35 billion) the government is expecting to collect this financial year.
"We are trying to capture non-tax revenue from places where service delivery is cheaper than actual revenue. The government's intention is not to maximise profits, but at least you should be able to recover the cost," said a finance ministry official, adding the ministries were willing to revise the rates.
The official said the increase in charges of services might not add significantly to the revenue kitty, but it would be appropriate to price these in line with the rise in inflation.
Charges of many services have not been revised for several years. For example, the charge for issuing a fresh passport has been Rs 1,000 since 2002.
States have also not adequately revised rates of some user services for years.
The Delhi Transport Corporation charges a maximum fare of Rs 15 on the longest journey, marginally higher than Rs 10
'US-India bonhomie driving Pakistan deeper into China's arms'
'It was a delight working for Secretary Clinton'
Sensitive posts: Govt suggests telcos hire Indians
2 key Indian American physicians quit Obama's team
Dantewada: Naxals shoot CPI worker, trigger blast