Chuppala Nagesh Bhushan Every time you pull into a petrol station, you aren’t just fueling your vehicle; you are participating in one of the most sophisticated economic extractions in modern history. There is a palpable, justified rage boiling among consumers who see the global cost of raw materials plummet while their own cost of living sky-rockets. The central question is a mathematical nightmare: Why is petrol draining your wallet at over ₹100 per liter today, when the crude oil used to make it is significantly cheaper than it was in 2014? As an advocate for the consumer, it is time to peel back the layers of government policy and expose how a systematic tax trap has been engineered to ensure that while the state coffers swell, the common man is systematically fleeced. The 2014 vs. Today Reality Check: The Raw Material Paradox To understand the sheer scale of this disconnect, we have to look at the hard data. In any honest market, when the cost of a raw material drops,...
The raw-material paradox: why cheaper crude oil has not meant cheaper petrol A decade of asymmetric taxation, a pandemic windfall captured by the state, and a diluted product sold at full price have combined to leave the Indian motorist paying record amounts for something that should, by any rational reckoning, cost far less Chuppala Nagesh Bhushan hYDERABAD T here is a puzzle at the heart of Indian fuel pricing that deserves more scrutiny than it typically receives. In 2014, crude oil — the raw material from which petrol is refined — traded at $105 per barrel. Indian motorists in Delhi paid ₹72 per litre at the pump. Today, the same crude costs roughly $96 per barrel, a decline of nearly 9%. Yet the same Delhi motorist now pays ₹102 per litre, and the Mumbaikar pays ₹111. The raw material became cheaper. The final product became dramatically more expensive. This is the Indian fuel paradox, and its explanation lies not in the global oil market, but in the domestic architecture of taxat...