The government could hike petrol prices by an initial 15 sen per litre from their current price at some stage this year under plans presented by a body advising the government on how to cut subsidies.
The benchmark RON 95 grade currently costs RM1.80 per litre.
The proposals were made in a public presentation on today to win over voters to accepting higher prices as Malaysia seeks to reduce its budget deficit which stood at a 20-year high of 7 percent of gross domestic product in 2009.
Under the proposals presented by the advisory body, the price of petrol would be hiked some time this year followed by two price hikes totalling 20 sen per litre in 2011 and two more of 20 sen per litre in 2012.
In 2013-2015, the price hikes would slow and by the end of 2015, the price of RON95 would stand at RM2.60 per litre,
according to the plans that have yet to be approved by the government.
The forecasts were based on a crude oil price forecast of US$73.06 per barrel for 2011 and US$79.41-US$94.52 for 2013-2015.
Subsidy cut proposals
The government will hike petrol, gas and toll highway rates under a five-year plan to cut subsidies, if the proposals made by Pemandu, a body advising the government on how to cut subsidies are enacted.
It has yet to make a decision on the planned subsidy cuts and may not do so for some months.
Subsidy cuts proposed involving 12 items:
Petrol
Petrol prices to be increased 15 sen in June-Dec 2010, then 10 sen hikes every six months between Jan 2011-Dec 2012 and by a lesser amount in following years.
Petrol prices seen at
The benchmark RON 95 grade currently costs RM1.80 per litre.
The proposals were made in a public presentation on today to win over voters to accepting higher prices as Malaysia seeks to reduce its budget deficit which stood at a 20-year high of 7 percent of gross domestic product in 2009.
Under the proposals presented by the advisory body, the price of petrol would be hiked some time this year followed by two price hikes totalling 20 sen per litre in 2011 and two more of 20 sen per litre in 2012.
In 2013-2015, the price hikes would slow and by the end of 2015, the price of RON95 would stand at RM2.60 per litre,
according to the plans that have yet to be approved by the government.
The forecasts were based on a crude oil price forecast of US$73.06 per barrel for 2011 and US$79.41-US$94.52 for 2013-2015.
Subsidy cut proposals
The government will hike petrol, gas and toll highway rates under a five-year plan to cut subsidies, if the proposals made by Pemandu, a body advising the government on how to cut subsidies are enacted.
It has yet to make a decision on the planned subsidy cuts and may not do so for some months.
Subsidy cuts proposed involving 12 items:
Petrol
Petrol prices to be increased 15 sen in June-Dec 2010, then 10 sen hikes every six months between Jan 2011-Dec 2012 and by a lesser amount in following years.
Petrol prices seen at
2011 - RM2.16
2012 - RM2.20
2013 - RM2.34
2014 - RM2.52
2015 - RM2.60
2012 - RM2.20
2013 - RM2.34
2014 - RM2.52
2015 - RM2.60
The forecast for crude oil in 2011 is US$73.06 per barrel and for 2013-2015 in the region of US$79.41-94.52.
Tolls
Renegotiation with PLUS highways in 2010 and with LDP Highways by 2013.
Propose that all concession agreements would proceed without subsidies, resulting in a toll hike of between 10-67 percent for 2010.
Gas
Gas price is increased by a fixed rate of RM3/MMBTU every six months from initial increase for power sector and non-power
sector.
Gas price increase of RM3/MMBTU every six months corresponds to an increase in electricity tariff of 1.6 sen/kWh every six months.
Electricity tariff for lifeline consumers (in 2010, less than 200 kWh) would not be increased. About 56 percent of households will not be affected in 2010.
Consumers with a monthly bill of 20 ringgit and below will continue to get free electricity until Dec 2010.
Strategic industries will be protected initially.
Inflationary impact
Estimated impact on inflation:
- A 5 percent increase in petrol prices would result in a 0.4 percentaage points rise in the consumer price index.
- A 10 percent increase would cause the CPI to go up by 0.82 percentage points. Fuel represents 7.7 percent of the CPI basket.
Total savings
* In 2010, government will save about RM3 billion. In 2011, RM14 billion, RM21 billion in 2012, RM29.5 billion in 2013 and RM35 billion in 2014.
- Reuters
Tolls
Renegotiation with PLUS highways in 2010 and with LDP Highways by 2013.
Propose that all concession agreements would proceed without subsidies, resulting in a toll hike of between 10-67 percent for 2010.
Gas
Gas price is increased by a fixed rate of RM3/MMBTU every six months from initial increase for power sector and non-power
sector.
Gas price increase of RM3/MMBTU every six months corresponds to an increase in electricity tariff of 1.6 sen/kWh every six months.
Electricity tariff for lifeline consumers (in 2010, less than 200 kWh) would not be increased. About 56 percent of households will not be affected in 2010.
Consumers with a monthly bill of 20 ringgit and below will continue to get free electricity until Dec 2010.
Strategic industries will be protected initially.
Inflationary impact
Estimated impact on inflation:
- A 5 percent increase in petrol prices would result in a 0.4 percentaage points rise in the consumer price index.
- A 10 percent increase would cause the CPI to go up by 0.82 percentage points. Fuel represents 7.7 percent of the CPI basket.
Total savings
* In 2010, government will save about RM3 billion. In 2011, RM14 billion, RM21 billion in 2012, RM29.5 billion in 2013 and RM35 billion in 2014.
- Reuters
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