Paper titled ‘Towards Tax Justice & Wealth Redistribution in India’ released | Current Affairs | Vision IAS
MENU
Home

Periodically curated articles and updates on national and international developments relevant for UPSC Civil Services Examination.

Quick Links

High-quality MCQs and Mains Answer Writing to sharpen skills and reinforce learning every day.

Watch explainer and thematic concept-building videos under initiatives like Deep Dive, Master Classes, etc., on important UPSC topics.

ESC

The paper is released by World Inequality Lab as a follow-up to its previous study titled ‘Income and Wealth Inequality in India, 1922-2023: The Rise of the Billionaire Raj’ published in March 2024. 

  • It proposes a tax package for the ultra-wealthy that could generate revenue between 2.5% - 5% of GDP. 
    • This revenue should be spent on social sectors like health and education for facilitating redistribution.

Income and Wealth Inequality in India

  • Trend: Inequality declined post-independence, began rising in the 1980s, and has skyrocketed since the 2000s.
  • Income Inequality: Top 1% earn 22.6% of total pre-tax national income (up from 7.3% in 1980) while bottom 50% earn only 15%.
  • Wealth Inequality: Top 1% control over 40% of total wealth (up from 12.5% in 1980) while bottom 50% hold only 6.4% of total wealth

Impact of Economic Inequality

Perpetuation of Poverty & Deprivation
Social Unrest & Conflict
Reduced Social Mobility
Political Instability
Reduced Economic Growth

Tax package proposed 

In a moderate scenario, the tax could be: 

  • Wealth Tax: 2 % annual tax on net wealth exceeding Rs. 10 crores and 4 % for net wealth exceeding Rs. 100 crores.
  • Inheritance Tax: 33% inheritance tax on estates exceeding Rs. 10 crores in valuation and 45% tax on estates exceeding Rs. 100 crores.
Watch Video News Today

Explore Related Content

Discover more articles, videos, and terms related to this topic

RELATED VIDEOS

3
News Today (Apr 26, 2024)

News Today (Apr 26, 2024)

YouTube HD
Circularity in Textile Structure

Circularity in Textile Structure

YouTube HD
Growth of Tier 2 and Tier 3 Cities in India

Growth of Tier 2 and Tier 3 Cities in India

YouTube HD
Title is required. Maximum 500 characters.

Search Notes

Filter Notes

Loading your notes...
Searching your notes...
Loading more notes...
You've reached the end of your notes

No notes yet

Create your first note to get started.

No notes found

Try adjusting your search criteria or clear the search.

Saving...
Saved

Please select a subject.

Referenced Articles

linked

No references added yet

Subscribe for Premium Features