Monday 2 September 2013

Economic Crisis Looms Large: Petrol Rationing on Cards


With economic crisis looming large on the Indian horizon, the UPA Government has set alarm bells. Rationing of petrol and diesel appears to be first step to reduce the rising import bills. The Petroleum Minister Veerappa Moily has sounded the alarm by telling that petrol pumps should operate only for 12 hours in a day- from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m.

Any move to ration petrol would send wrong signals to the industry which has already gone into negative zone in terms of growth during the first quarter – April to June of the current financial year. It will further discourage investments. Not only that it will send negative vibes to the global players who have already withdrawn their hands from investing in India.

The government attempt to ration petrol directly contradicts Prime Minister Mamohan Singh and his Finance Minister P Chidambaram who have expressed confidence in the Indian economy by declaring that it will improve soon and the declining trend would be reversed. The statements were made on the floor of Parliament last week.

If the government is so confident of reversing the trend then why Prime Minister Manmohan Singh asked the Petroleum Minister to take steps to reduce the oil import bills by 25 billion US $. Moily is desperate to deliver results on the dictated line of Prime Minister. Just by reducing the hours of availability of petrol and diesel at the retail outlets would not necessarily reduce consumption of the product. It will, on the contrary, lead to hoarding and black marketing of petrol and diesel. Car owners who normally buy say 10-20 liters in a day would tend to get their fuel tank full and maintain the meter constantly at half the capacity of the tank.

If the government is sincere and serious about the crisis then, Prime Minister should come once again to Parliament which still is in session for another couple of days and tell the nation that the country is in financial crisis. The government should appeal to the people to minimize consumption of not only petrol and diesel but also restrict consumption and use of imported goods.

I recall the appeal of the then Prime Minister Lal Bahadur Shastri who had asked us to skip one meal in a week. People responded enthusiastically and overwhelmingly to Shastriji’s appeal and saved food grains in million of tones. Alas, Manmohan Singh is not Lal Bahadur Shatri. Still, he as the Prime Minister of India and can admit before the nation and appeal to the people to make small sacrifice to arrest the falling rupee and rising Current Accounts Deficit. Our import bill on imports of crude oil alone is more than Rs. 8,500 crores a year.

Moil has also suggested that India should increase the import of crude oil from Iran substantially and save 57,000 crores of rupees since Iran oil is cheap and payment is made in Indian currency; not in US dollars. But the catch is the UN sanction on Iran. Can the present government afford to antognise Washington by defying the UN sanctions against Iran and go for large scale import of crude oil to reduce the current accounts deficit which stands at staggering 80 billion US dollars? It is unlikely.

~R. K. SINHA



No comments:

Post a Comment