The PMUY scheme offers deposit-free LPG connections to needy households. These connections are in the name of the women members of the families. The cost of the connection and the first free full cylinder (roughly Rs 1,600) were supposed to be recovered by oil companies through subsidies accrued on the purchase of cylinders by PMUY recipients at full prices.
The scheme had issues from the start and PMUY recipients complained they could not afford to refill the cylinders at full prices. To sweeten the deal, the Centre waived the recovery of upfront amounts.
Cut to 2020. International fuel prices were at their lowest point ever. Crude oil even entered negative territory for a day in April last year. Taking advantage of the fall in global crude oil prices, the Centre quietly did away with LPG subsidies from May 2020. Domestic LPG in April 2020 cost Rs 581 in Delhi. Today it is Rs 859.50 apiece and there is no subsidy on LPG, barring a marginal one on freight to cooking gas consumers in the country. This amounts to less than Rs 30 a domestic (14.2 kg) cylinder in most cases.
Sector watchers say budgetary allocations for LPG subsidy may soon vanish, going the way of kerosene subsidy in the Budget 2021. This will mean that consumers will bear the full price of a domestic cylinder even if it is over Rs 1,000 apiece. The Modi government can keep prices under some check by issuing verbal (informal and always unwritten) diktats to public sector oil companies on prices, like it does on petrol and diesel prices. But the burden of keeping LPG affordable will shift to the oil companies instead of the Union Budget, freeing up much fiscal room for the Centre. “A call on whether to resume LPG subsidy is a political decision, and will be taken by the Ministry of Finance,” a government official said.
How will the government offset the political impact of retiring a highly popular scheme? One option is to make gas cylinders free for the PMUY beneficiaries, as was done during the first pandemic wave. This benefits over 80 million households, and is likely to see runaway success in poll-bound states, especially Uttar Pradesh.
According to the Uttar Pradesh government, there are 14.7 million PMUY consumers in the state, the highest in India. Chief Minister Yogi Adityanath himself oversaw the disbursement of some PMUY connections recently.
But the scheme cannot be replicated for one simple reason: A subsidised (free) gas cylinder is a one-time deal. For a refill, customers will have to pay the prevailing market price. This means low-income families could face an unpredictable hit and be vulnerable to fluctuations in the international oil prices.
For the moment, the government seems to be content with monitoring LPG consumption for any signs of a dip. But sector watchers say if the prices rise too high, consumers will simply stop buying LPG. Urban consumers who are accustomed to LPG and have no choice will keep paying market-linked prices. But rural consumers have other options — they could go back to using firewood or other biomass-based cooking-fuels. Electric cooking too can be an alternative for urban consumers in cities like Delhi, where it is cheaper than LPG, but adoption has been so slow that oil companies do not see it as a threat.
Either way, high international prices could ring the death-knell of a scheme that was instrumental in returning the BJP to power in 2019.
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