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Saturday September 07, 2024

Interim govt increases petrol price by over Rs17 per litre

Price of diesel has been jacked up by Rs20 in fortnightly review

By Saif Ur Rehman
August 16, 2023
A car being refuelled in this undated picture. — AFP/File
A car being refuelled in this undated picture. — AFP/File

In its first major decision, Caretaker Prime Minister Anwaar-ul-Haq Kakar's government on Tuesday night jacked up the petrol price by more than Rs17 per litre.

"Petroleum prices in the international market have increased during the last fortnight. As a result the consumer prices in Pakistan are also being revised," said the Finance Ministry while notifying the increase in the price. 

ProductExisting price w.e.f Aug 1New price w.e.f Aug 16 Change
Petrol272.95290.45+17.50
High Speed Diesel273.40293.40+20

Earlier on August 1, the former Pakistan Democratic Movement (PDM)-led government had announced a massive Rs19 per litre increase in the price of petrol and diesel, which it said was done amid rising global oil prices.

The announcement was due on July 31, but the government did not issue new rates as the officials tried to maintain or reduce the rates — keeping in view the impact of the price hike on inflation-weary people.

The latest fuel price hike is likely to trigger a fresh wave of inflation in August.

Inflation hit a record 38% in May but the State Bank of Pakistan (SBP) decided to keep the key interest rate unchanged at 22% amid nominal decline in inflation last month.

The Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) particularly noted that year-on-year inflation is likely to remain on a downward path over the next 12 months, which implies a significant level of positive real interest rate.

Years of financial mismanagement have pushed Pakistan´s economy to the limit, exacerbated by the COVID-19 pandemic, a global energy crisis and record floods that submerged a third of the country last year.

But Islamabad struck a $3 billion standby deal with the International Monetary Fund (IMF) last month that could provide temporary relief for the country´s ballooning foreign debt.

The deal forces the government to scrap a range of subsidies that help the poor but the fuel price hike is largely in line with a rise in oil globally.