WORLD INEQUALITY LAB - REPORTS AND INDICES

News: India’s top 1% income, wealth shares have reached historical highs: World Inequality Lab

 

What's in the news?

       According to a paper released by the World Inequality Lab, the share of income and wealth of India’s top 1% at 22.6% and 40.1% respectively is at their highest historical levels in 2022-23.

 

Key Takeaways from the Working Paper Published by the WIL:

Researchers Involved:

       The working paper by four economics researchers – Nitin Kumar Bharti, Lucas Chancel, Thomas Piketty, and Anmol Somanchi – has created time series data on income and wealth inequality in India.

 

Billionaire Raj:

       Naming the paper, the “Billionaire Raj”, the authors claimed that the country was now more unequal than even the British Raj.

 

Key Findings:

Top 1% - Super Rich:

       As per the report, in the year 2022-23, top 1% income and wealth shares were at their highest ever historical levels in India - 22.6% and 40.1%.

       India’s top 1% income share is among the very highest in the world, higher than even South Africa, Brazil, and the US, the paper said.

       The wealth share of the top 1% was lesser in India than in two of these countries - South Africa and Brazil.

 

Disparity Among Different Income Groups:

       According to the paper, the top 1% holds an average of Rs 5.4 crore in wealth, 40 times the average Indian.

       However, the bottom 50% and the middle 40% hold Rs 1.7 lakh (0.1 times national average) and Rs 9.6 lakh (0.7 times national average) respectively.

       At the very top of the distribution, the wealthiest 10,000 individuals out of 92 million Indian adults own an average of Rs 2,260 crore in wealth, 16,763 times the average Indian.

 

Key Suggestions in the Working Paper:

Estimates from Multiple Sources:

       The paper has used multiple sources to build its income and wealth inequality estimates.

       India does not have official income estimates and survey based official statistics on wealth.

 

Policy Recommendations:

       The paper recommends multiple policy measures to address the problem of inequality in India.

       They include restructuring of the tax code to account for both income and wealth, and broad-based public investments in health, education and nutrition.

 

Imposition of Super Tax:

       The report said a “super tax” of 2% on the net wealth of the 167 wealthiest families in 2022-23 would yield 0.5% of national income in revenues.

 

Benefit of Super Tax:

       It would also create valuable fiscal space to facilitate such investments, besides serving as a tool to fight inequality.

 

Go back to basics:

World Inequality Lab:

       The World Inequality Lab (WIL) is a research facility of the Paris School of Economics.

 

Objective:

       To foster research in global inequality dynamics.

 

Collaboration:

       It collaborates closely with a wide international network of scholars (more than 100 researchers from almost 70 countries) who contribute to the database.

 

World Inequality Report:

       The report is released by Paris-based World Inequality Lab, a global research initiative.

 

Income Inequality:

       Income inequality refers to how unevenly income is distributed in a population.

       The less equal the distribution, the greater the income inequality.