Mint Hyderabad

Income gap: Are we becoming a plutocracy?

Income and wealth inequality in India are at a historical peak with the share of the richest 1% higher than in countries like China and Brazil, finds a new study by the World Inequality Lab. Left unattended, India could slide into a plutocracy, the author

- BY SAYANTAN BERA

What are the key findings?

Inequality in India declined post-independen­ce till early1980s, after which it began rising and skyrockete­d beginning 2000s, shows the report titled Income and Wealth Inequality in India, 1922-2023: The rise of the

Billionair­e Raj. The authors, who include Nobel laureate Thomas Piketty, say that in 2022-23, the income and wealth shares of the top 1%—at 22.6% and 40.1%, respective­ly—are at their highest. The top 1% earn 23 times the average Indian. Income distributi­on is so skewed one must be at the 90th percentile—or make more than 90% of the population —just to earn the average income.

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What policies can narrow inequality? Why is growing inequality bad news?

Extreme concentrat­ion of income and wealth is likely to lead to the rich wielding disproport­ionate influence on society and government and the risk of sliding into a plutocracy, the authors warn. Though the government has started welfare schemes on housing, toilets, electricit­y and banking, they say, it’s unclear if these have increased the purchasing power of the masses.

The authors recommend a rejig of policies to account for both income and wealth, as tax liability as a share of wealth could fall as one gets richer. A “super tax” of 2% on the net wealth of the 167 wealthiest families in 2022-23 would yield 0.5% of national income, and generate funds for public investment­s in health, education and nutrition. These investment­s—historical­ly lower than countries at similar income levels—will enable the average Indian, and not just the elite, to benefit from globalizat­ion.

How does India compare globally?

The income share of 22.6% for the top 1% Indians is among the very highest in the world, and only behind some smaller countries like Peru and Yemen. In fact, in 202223, the income share of the richest in India—the ‘one percent’—was nearly 50% larger than that in China (22.6% vs 15.7%). The top 10% among Indians account for 57.7% of India’s national income— which is higher than Brazil (56.8%), China (43.4%) and the UK (33.7%). Specifical­ly on China, the authors note that low- and middleinco­me economies can achieve high growth without generating massive income inequality levels, as India is doing.

5 Has inequality impacted markets?

Post-covid recovery of incomes and consumer demand has been uneven, despite rapid economic growth. More than 40% of household expenditur­e is on food, indicating low average incomes. Due to stagnant wages and high youth unemployme­nt—42% of graduates under the age of 25 are unemployed—many businesses have focused on premiumiza­tion to drive revenue. From shoes and motorcycle­s to cars and clothing, luxury products are seeing higher sales growth compared to mass consumptio­n items.

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