Governments often delay announcing difficult economic decisions, such as fuel price hikes, until after elections to avoid burdening voters during campaign periods, which creates public cynicism and trust deficits as citizens perceive that economic realities are passed on to the public only after votes are secured.
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Petrol, Diesel Prices Hiked: Why Fuel Rates Went Up Right After Elections | Oil Price | Modi追加:
As anticipated, the assembly elections are over. Votes have been cast.
Governments have been formed. And now comes the announcement many people were quietly expecting. Petrol and diesel prices have been increased by around 3 rupees per liter across the country. In Delhi, petrol is now nearing the 100 rupees mark once again. The official explanation is simple. Global crude oil prices have surged because of tensions in West Asia, especially around the straight of Homo. Oil marketing companies have reportedly been facing heavy losses for months. Fair enough.
Global events do impact India. India imports a major portion of its crude oil. Nobody can deny that reality. But citizens are also asking a very legitimate question. Did the government realize this financial crisis only after the elections got over? Or was this decision politically delayed till voting was completed? Because if we look back at the last few weeks, there were already strong reports and market discussions suggesting that fuel prices could go up after the elections.
Brokerage firms had openly warned about this possibility. Reports had even suggested that oil companies were under severe stress due to frozen prices. At that time, however, the government publicly denied that any proposal was under consideration. Now suddenly immediately after elections the hike arrives. This is where perception becomes important in politics. People begin to feel that difficult economic decisions are often postponed till after elections. During campaign season, governments avoid burdening voters. Once the votes are secured, the economic realities are passed on to the public.
And this is not merely about three rupees extra on petrol or diesel. Fuel prices affect almost everything.
Transportation costs rise. Vegetable prices rise. Delivery charges rise. Taxi fairs eventually increase. Small businesses feel the pressure.
Middle-class household budgets get disturbed. Inflation quietly enters everyday life through fuel. For a salaried person already dealing with school fees, emmes, electricity bills, and rising food prices, every fuel hike feels personal. What also makes citizens cynical is the selective nature of market linked pricing. When global crude prices fall sharply, consumers often do not see proportionate reductions at the pump. But when crude prices rise, revisions happen very quickly. That creates a trust deficit. The larger issue here is political honesty. If the situation was genuinely serious, why not tell the public before elections itself?
Why not say openly that global oil prices have become unsustainable and some correction may become necessary?
Why wait till polling is over? Democracy is not only about asking people to vote.
It is also about trusting citizens with uncomfortable economic truths before they vote because otherwise people start feeling that elections are becoming periods of artificial economic stability followed by postelection correction shocks and that eventually damages public trust more than the actual price hike itself.
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