HomeNewsBusinessPersonal FinanceHow a small tax-paying elite funds the Indian state

How a small tax-paying elite funds the Indian state

The top 1% individual taxpayers contribute nearly one-third of India’s taxes, while the top 5% contribute nearly two-thirds of all the taxes collected

July 31, 2019 / 13:44 IST
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Mint

The move to raise surcharges on the incomes of India’s super-rich taxpayers has led to a barrage of criticism from tax experts who have questioned such “soak-the-rich” policies. The finance ministry has justified this decision on the grounds of equity.

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While much of the discussion on this issue has focused on foreign portfolio investors, some of whom have been hit by this move, what has eluded attention is that the so-called ‘super-rich’ are also the primary contributors to the Indian state’s treasury. Despite a very low percentage of tax filers falling in the highest tax liability brackets, the lion’s share of direct tax revenues comes from a small pool of rich taxpayers, a Mint analysis of the tax returns data published by the income tax department shows.

For instance, those with incomes between Rs 2 crore and Rs 5 crore (those affected by the new surcharge) and hence in the tax liability brackets of Rs 69 lakh to Rs 1.8 crore accounted for about 0.1 percent of the effective personal income tax base (excluding those paying zero taxes). But taxpayer data for assessment year 2017-18 shows that this tiny group contributed 13 percent to the overall personal income tax collection in that year.