‘India is importing Russian oil to manage inflation’
NEW DELHI: India's finance minister said on Thursday that importing Russian oil was part of the country's inflation-management strategy and that other countries were doing something similar.
Despite Western pressure, India has not condemned Russia's February invasion of Ukraine, instead calling for a diplomatic solution to the crisis and an end to violence. Russia has for decades been India's biggest foreign supplier of defence hardware.
India's crude oil shipments from Russia have jumped to between 12 percent and 13 percent of imports from all sources since February from about 2 percent before then, Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman said.
India is the world's third-biggest consumer and importer of crude oil, and Sitharaman said Prime Minister Narendra Modi deserved credit for balancing trade and other ties with various countries.
"I give credit to the statesmanship of the prime minister to make sure globally that we did keep up the relationship with all countries but yet managed to get the Russian fuel, which is what Japan is doing today, which is what some other countries are doing," Sitharaman said at an event in New Delhi.
Indian government ministers have repeatedly said the country needed to keep buying energy from Russia to keep inflation under check.
Sitharaman said India's inflation management was "an exercise of so many activities, most of which are outside the (purview of) monetary policy".
Indian retail prices in July were 6.71 percent higher than a year earlier. Although the annual inflation rate has now fallen for three months, it has exceeded the central bank's tolerance band of 2 percent to 6 percent for seventh months in a row.
Earlier US Deputy Treasury Secretary Wally Adeyemo said he was hopeful that China and India would join the coalition of countries seeking to impose a price cap on Russian oil or simply use the cap to buy Russian oil at a cheaper price.
"Our hope is that countries like China and India will join the price cap coalition, or take advantage of the price cap coalition, to lower the amount of money" that Russia makes from oil exports," Adeyemo told a financial industry conference in New York.
The European Union proposed a price cap on Russian gas after President Vladimir Putin threatened to cut off all energy supplies if it took such a step, raising the risk of rationing in some of the world's richest countries this winter. —News Desk
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