You Don’t Need to Pay Higher Price for Your Bottled Water. Here’s Why.

Do you sigh in disgust and frustration whenever you have to shell out extra money to buy bottled water or aerated drinks at airports, railway stations, malls or cinema halls?

Well, no longer now!

Bringing a sigh of relief to customers, the consumer affairs department has made a breakthrough statement in its latest advisory to all state governments that a single commodity, product or packaged item cannot have two maximum retail prices (MRPs) at the same time. The directive includes bottled water, beverages and other snack items.

A senior department official from consumer affairs revealed that Indian law never provides for dual MRP provision in the packaged commodities. Therefore, the onus lies on the state governments to ensure that no one sells packaged items at different prices within a region. He also added that if two different MRPs are found, the lowest one will be treated as the actual price.

The orders have been made by the National Consumer Disputes Redressal Commission (NCDRC) itself. It maintains that restaurants can charge more than the MRP as they render a service, but a stall or shop is bound to sell at the MRP.

With this directive, all the ambiguity in the general public regarding the prices has been cleared.

Now, don’t pay even a single penny over and above the MRP even if they try to reason it with so and so tax or cess. The MRP is set taking all this in consideration.

Spread the word, folks!

Image Credits: Google Images

Coverage: Times of India

Ratisha: A woman with varied interests, from geeky technology to serene poetry, but with a solitary passion to play with words. Ratisha is educated in sociology, psychology and human rights, that has sensitized her well to talk about all topics of human concern. She has been writing for many nationally and internationally acclaimed e-magazines and news portals including The Huffington Post, (United States) among others. When not writing, she is either found brushing strokes on a canvas or peering through her glasses into a novel.
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