Government on Thursday said it is not in favour of freeing diesel prices right now as headline inflation is still in the uncomfortable zone.
"I am not of the view that diesel price deregulation is inevitable and that is the position taken by petroleum ministry right now. Given the inflationary situation right now, we don't want to do that...," chief economic adviser Kaushik Basu told reporters on the sidelines of a CII event here.
However, Basu said that if international crude oil prices continue to remain high for a longer time the government will have to make a tough choice between hiking diesel and cooking fuel prices and shelling out more on oil subsidies to companies.
"I can't give you an assurance that it will happen nor can I say it won't happen....It depends on how long the USD 115-116 a barrel lasts. There can come a point where we are forced to confront the question -- Do we take it on fiscal or do we pass it on consumers," Basu said.
For 2011-12, the finance ministry has estimated Rs 23,640 crore in oil subsidy, lower than Rs 38,386 crore (Rs 383.86 billion) of current fiscal.
Global crude oil prices are at the highest level since 2008, touching USD 116 per barrel. The government had in June last year decided to free petrol pricing from its control and the same on diesel was to be done eventually.
The spike in crude rates has meant that even retail rates of petrol have not moved in tandem with cost while the deregulation of diesel has been kept in abeyance.
India's oil imports grew by 7.8 per cent to USD 7.85 billion in January, taking the import bill during April- January, 2010-11, to USD 79.95 billion.
Meanwhile commenting on food inflation figures released today, Basu said that although there is a dip, the numbers are not very comfortable.
Food inflation for the week ended February 19 shows a percentage point dip to 10.39 per cent over 11.49 per cent in the previous week.