Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

The Billionair­e Raj?

- By Amit Tyagi, exclusivel­y for the Sunday Times in Sri Lanka Amit Tyagi is Chief Risk Officer of Zand. Copyright: Project Syndicate, 2022. www.project- syndicate.org

DUBAI – Several reports in the last few months have sounded the alarm about growing income and wealth inequality in India. The statistics cited are not wrong, but they are incomplete. And they have produced sensationa­l, but misleading, news stories.

For example, an article based on Oxfam’s recent “Inequality Kills” report notes: “India has the third-highest number of billionair­es in the world.” The story points out that India has 142 billionair­es but ignores that India has 1.4 billion people. Only one in ten million Indians is a billionair­e, whereas such “billionair­e density” is eight in Russia, three in Brazil, more than four in China, and 22 in the United States. Likewise, while “India has more billionair­es than France, Sweden, and Switzerlan­d combined,” in terms of billionair­e density these three countries together have 18 times more billionair­es than India.

It should come as no surprise that rich countries have more billionair­es relative to their population­s than poor countries do. For a more accurate comparison, consider billionair­e density in middle-income countries. Relative to the world’s top 20 middle-income economies, India ranks quite low. Countries like Brazil, Malaysia, and Thailand have a far greater number of billionair­es relative to their size.

Oxfam is not the only organisati­on to point out India’s wealth gap. In December, the World Inequality Report 2022, the flagship publicatio­n of the World Inequality Lab at the Paris School of Economics, included India among the world’s most unequal countries. This research, coordinate­d by leading economists, fueled sensationa­l headlines – “Poor Country with Affluent Elite, India Is Going Nowhere,” or, even worse, “How Hindu Nationalis­m Enables India’s Slide into Inequality” – that turned the topic into a domestic political issue.

To be sure, both income and wealth inequality have increased in India in recent years. According to the World Inequality Report, the richest 10% of Indians account for 57.1% of all income, compared to only 13.2% for the poorest half. And wealth inequality is more pronounced. The poorest half of the Indian population possesses just 5.9% of the country’s total wealth, whereas the richest 10% controls 64.7%. But do these figures really support the claim that India is one of the world’s most unequal countries?

Although India’s poorest half holds a small percentage of the country’s total wealth, its members are still better off than their peers in most countries. Whereas India ranks 67th among the world’s 100 largest economies in terms of income earned by the poorest 50%, it ranks 17th in terms of the percentage of wealth held by the poorest half.

In any case, statistics that compare the top 10% and bottom 50%, while easy to comprehend, are not the only measures of inequality. Calculated from the World Inequality Report data, India’s Gini coefficien­t – a widely used indicator that ranges from 0, indicating perfect equality, to 1, for perfect inequality – is 0.6 for income inequality and 0.7 for wealth inequality. Compared to the largest 100 economies of the world, India lies in the middle for wealth inequality and among the top 20 for income inequality.

On balance, India is no paragon of egalitaria­nism, but nor is it one of the world’s most unequal countries.

A more fundamenta­l question is whether India should continue to focus on economic growth to reduce poverty, even if it increases inequality. The answer, according to the Indian government’s 2020-21 economic survey is, unsurprisi­ngly, an unqualifie­d yes. The government is betting that a rising tide lifts all boats, and the facts seem to support this maxim.

In the decade from 2006 to 2016, the Indian economy averaged 7.6% annual growth – one of the fastest ten-year expansions in the country’s history. Concurrent with that growth was an increase in inequality: the share of income going to the richest 10% increased from 47.8% to 57.1%, while the share of the poorest half declined from 16.1% to 13.1%. But, over the same period, the number of people living in multidimen­sional poverty – a broad measure covering health, education, and standard of living – decreased from 642 million to 370 million.

Although the COVID-19 pandemic reversed some of these gains, a recent working paper by the National Bureau of Economic Research shows that income inequality in India declined. Richer Indians experience­d a steeper drop in income than poorer ones, as their businesses were most affected by the economic downturn. And demand for the kind of service- sector jobs held by wealthier Indians fell sharply. The Internatio­nal Monetary Fund forecasts 24% growth for the Indian economy in 2021-23, which one hopes will reduce both poverty and inequality.

The relationsh­ip between economic growth, poverty, and inequality is complex, and the forces that influence it in richer countries may not be at play in India. Economic growth has lifted more than 250 million Indians out of poverty in a relatively short time. As a result, inequality has increased – but not to levels that should trigger alarm bells.

The views expressed in this commentary are solely of the author.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Sri Lanka