Monday, January 16, 2023

India's 1%

 


India's top 1% owned more than 40.5% of its total wealth in 2021, according to Oxfam.

In 2022, the number of billionaires in the country increased to 166 from from 102 in 2020.

 The report added that the poor in India "are unable to afford even basic necessities to survive".

The report highlighted the large disparity in wealth distribution in India, saying that more than 40% of the wealth created in the country from 2012 to 2021 had gone to just 1% of the population while only 3% had trickled down to the bottom 50%.

In 2022, the wealth of India's richest man Gautam Adani increased by 46%, while the combined wealth of India's 100 richest had touched $660bn. In 2022, Mr Adani was ranked the second richest person in the world on the Bloomberg's wealth index. He also topped the list of people whose wealth witnessed the maximum rise globally during the year.

Meanwhile, the country's poor and middle class were taxed more than the rich, Oxfam said. Approximately 64% of the total goods and services tax (GST) in the country came from the bottom 50% of the population, while only 4% came from the top 10%, the report said. The rich, currently, benefit from reduced corporate taxes, tax exemptions and other incentives, the report said.


"India is unfortunately on a fast track to becoming a country only for the rich," Oxfam India CEO Amitabh Behar said. "The country's marginalised - Dalits, Adivasis, Muslims, women and informal sector workers are continuing to suffer in a system which ensures the survival of the richest."


Richest 1% own 40.5% of India's wealth, says new Oxfam report - BBC News

No comments: