TAIPEI - The Taiwanese government announced Sunday the end of a fuel
subsidy that had been in place 16 months, pushing up petrol prices by around 10
percent and drawing condemnation from opposition parties.
From Monday, the price of unleaded gasoline will rise at most petrol
stations by up to 10.6 percent per litre, while the price of a litre of diesel
will jump by 10.3 percent.
"This is a difficult decision. I fully understand that people will
have to pay more from their pockets, but we have to do this," Economic
Affairs Minister Shih Yen-shiang told reporters.
"As a minister, I have to take into consideration the country's
long-term development, which has been threatened by the subsidies."
Unleaded petrol will go up to between Tw$34-Tw$37.5 (S$1.44 to S$1.59)
a litre, depending on the type of petrol, while the price of diesel will go up
to Tw$33.1.
The move drew swift condemnation from the opposition.
Thomas Lee, a lawmaker from the opposition People First Party,
condemned the price hike as "an April Fool's joke the government played on
the people".
Main opposition group the Democratic Progressive Party demanded the
government overhaul the state-run CPC Corp. Taiwan, the island's main oil
supplier, rather than hike prices.
Shih said that since the subsidy was introduced in late 2010, CPC
Corp., which controls some 75 percent of the island's petroleum market, had
generated a loss of Tw48.6 billion.
CPC will end the subsidy Monday, while Taiwan's only other oil
supplier, the smaller Formosa Petrochemical Corp., said it would follow suit on
Tuesday.
AFP
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