AP’s New Excise Policy to Involve Private Players
VIJAYAWADA: The newly formed Telugu Desam government, led by Chief Minister N. Chandrababu Naidu, is likely to come up with a new excise policy involving private agencies to sell liquor in the retail market after the end of current excise policy as it is valid up to September 2024 in the state. Minister for excise Kollu Ravindra assumed charge on Friday and a section of employees from both the excise and Special Enforcement Bureau met him and congratulated the minister. The minister is learnt to have given a hint to them on the proposed move to restore the old excise policy wherein private parties sold liquor.
Later, at a separate programme, the minister vowed efforts to ensure supply of quality liquor at affordable price.
Excise sources say that the state government will take up a study on the old system of allowing private agencies to sell liquor and come up with an excise policy from October 2024. Sources from excise say that roping in private agencies through an auction will help the state government earn good revenue in the form of non-refundable deposit, fee and others and the private agencies will be permitted to sell brands of liquor and beer which are in high demand. At present, AP has 2,934 government retail liquor outlets and it gets daily revenue ranging from Rs 60-70 crore per day on an average. Moreover, there is a proposal to merge both the excise and SEB as it was divided earlier by the previous YSRC regime with a purpose to tackle excise crimes. At present, excise department has 30 per cent of staff while SEB has 70 per cent staff. Out of a total staff of around 6,000, nearly 4,000 personnel have been drafted to SEB and such a huge strength of SEB personnel are under the control of 18 IPS officers, two DSPs and a few inspectors.