Even though the government has been under compulsion to maintain its fiscal and budgetary resource management targets and find additional resources to finance various welfare schemes, it has sacrificed its revenues from the oil sector on account of customs and excise duty in order to minimise the impact on the common man, the letter emphasised.
The central government decision remove customs duty on crude oil, reduction in customs duty on petroleum products and excise duty cut on diesel together would result in a revenue loss of Rs 49,000 crore (Rs 490 billion) per annum.
In order to partly neutralise the impact of the price hike, West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee has announced withdrawal of sales tax on cooking gas.
The decision would reduce the price of a cylinder of LPG by Rs 16. In view of the widespread protests against the price hike, the Congress has also asked its Chief Ministers to look at the possibility of providing similar relief to the common man.
The price of crude oil in the international market, according to Petroleum Ministry, has gone up from $75 per barrel in June, 2010, when the prices of diesel, kerosene and LPG were raised last, to $110 per barrel. India imports about 84 per cent of its total crude oil requirement.
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