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Who will bear the costs of higher crude oil prices?

The central government has the room to isolate consumers from roughly 15 percent hike in international crude oil prices, and take the hit on its own income in FY23 

March 21, 2022 / 10:15 IST
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Crude oil is one of those external shocks for the Indian economy, the adverse impacts of which are inevitable. According to the Reserve Bank of India’s (RBI) study, a 10 percent rise in crude oil prices weakens India’s real GDP growth by around 20 basis points (bps) over the baseline. Thus, if crude oil averages $100/bbl (or $125/bbl) vis-à-vis the baseline of $75/bbl, it implies a downgrade of roughly 67bps (134bps) to FY23 growth.

Brent crude oil prices have fluctuated from $70-80/bbl in late CY21 to its peak of around $130/bbl recently before softening towards $100/bbl now on account of geopolitical uncertainties.

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Accordingly, we have also revised our forecasts to $80/75 per bbl for FY23/FY24 from $70/65 per bbl earlier. This implies an increase of 15 percent in international crude oil prices, which means a downgrade of about 30bps from real GDP growth next year. Whenever there is any loss in the national output (or income), one or more of the three domestic agents — consumers, companies and/or government — bear this burden. In this note, I recommend the Government of India (GoI) to incur the additional losses, isolating the consumers as much as possible from the current shock.

A change in international crude oil price does not lead to an equal percentage change in domestic retail fuel prices. Some components of retail prices such as excise duty per litre and dealers’ commission are static. Therefore, after adjusting for these components, an RBI study finds that the pass-through of international crude prices into domestic retail prices is only around 66 percent, if Oil Marketing Companies (OMCs) pass the whole of international price increase on to the final consumers.