Finance ministry plans to take up with CCEA reduction in sops on food, fertiliser, petroleum. |
The finance ministry will soon present a road map for reducing the overall subsidy burden on food, fertilisers and petroleum to the Cabinet Committee of Economic Affairs. |
Officials said Prime Minister Manmohan Singh had last week discussed the matter with Finance Secretary Adarsh Kishore. |
The ministry is reviewing the Rangarajan committee report on petroleum subsidies while the YK Alagh report on fertilisers is being examined to finalise the third stage of urea price mechanism. |
The government has put on hold a revision of petroleum prices pending the review of the Rangarajan committee report. |
It is learnt that the finance ministry is finalising its recommendations on slashing subsidies and it will seek political approval for the move. |
The Rangarajan committee had favoured removal of subsidy for domestic gas through a one-time increase of Rs 75 per cylinder followed by a gradual phase out of the subsidy. It had also recommended that the subsidy for kerosene should be limited to those below the poverty line. |
A report on food subsidies, considered for discussion with stakeholders last year, had recommended decentralisation of procurement, discontinuing open-ended procurement and fixing targets, developing a system of price insurance on the lines of farm income insurance programme without any subsidy allocation and introduction of food coupons to families below the poverty line. |
The report had also recommended that reimbursement of costs to the Food Corporation of India should be on the basis of norms rather than on actual basis. |
The finance ministry had in December 2004 prepared a paper on "Central government subsidies in India", which stated that central government subsidies amounted to 4.25 per cent in 2002-03 and 4.18 per cent in 2003-04, which was far higher than the subsidy level of 3.49 per cent in 1996-97. |
The increase was due to inclusion of petroleum subsidy in the Budget from 2002-03 and an increase in the share of explicit subsidies. |