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NEWS ALERTS | Top 10% of Urban Indian Households has 7,517 Times the Assets of the Bottom Decile
Top 10% of Urban Indian Households has 7,517 Times the Assets of the Bottom Decile

Top 10% of Urban Indian Households has 7,517 Times the Assets of the Bottom Decile

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published Published on Mar 23, 2023   modified Modified on Mar 24, 2023

The average value of assets (AVA) of the top ten percent of urban households in India is more than seven thousand five hundred times greater than what the bottom ten percent owns. The AVA of the top decile was Rs. 1.5 crores, while the lowest decile owned an average of Rs. 2,000 of assets. The data is part of the All India Debt and Investment Survey - 2019, the survey for which was carried out between January-December, 2019 by the National Sample Survey Organization in its 77th round. Information on the assets and liabilities of households as of 30 June, 2018. The survey was spread over 5,940 villages covering 69,455 households in the rural sector and 3,995 blocks covering 47,006 households in the urban sector.

Figure 1: Average value of Assets (000' Rs.) by decile class of asset holding

Source: NSS Report no. 588: All India Debt & Investment Survey-2019, Ministry of Statistics & Programme Implementation

 

The chart shows the average value of assets per decile. Up till the fourth decile (30-40 percent) urban Indians are worse off than rural Indians, but from the fifth decile onwards the AVA of city dwellers starts outstripping rural residents. The survey suggests that rural households are better off than urban ones at the lower deciles.    

Rural inequality is not as stark as in urban areas. The difference between the top and the bottom declines is 198. Meaning the top 10 percent of rural households owns on average 198 times the assets of the bottom 10 percent. The AVA of the 10th decile of rural households is Rs. 81.17 lakh while households in the 1st decile hold on average Rs. 41,000. 

Household assets are defined in the report as everything owned by the household that has monetary value. This includes physical assets like land, buildings, livestock, agricultural machinery and implements, non-farm business equipment, all transport equipment, and financial assets like receivable on loans advanced in cash or in kind, shares in companies and cooperative societies, banks, etc., national saving certificates and the like, deposits in companies, banks, post offices and with individuals.

What about a breakdown by social group? The report has gathered caste-wise data on ownership of assets. 

 

Table 1: Average Value of Assets by Social Group

Source: NSS Report no. 588: All India Debt & Investment Survey-2019, Ministry of Statistics & Programme Implementation

 

The table above shows that Scheduled Castes (SCs) are the worst off when it comes to asset ownership. The average assets of a rural SC households are equivalent to Rs. 8.79 lakh, while the figure for urban households is Rs. 13.15 lakh. Scheduled Tribes (STs) are slightly better off at Rs. 8.84 lakh and Rs. 18.9 lakh respectively. Other Backward Classes (OBC) households in rural areas own twice the assets of SCs and STs, at Rs. 16.45 lakh while their urban counterparts own an average of Rs. 21.2 lakhs in assets. The Upper Castes, classified as ‘Others’ in the report, are the richest. Rural households own an average of Rs. 26.03 lakh while urban households own Rs. 40.54 lakh in assets. 

 

Table 2: Incidence of indebtedness (IOI), Average amount of Debt (AOD) per household & AOD per indebted household

Source: NSS Report no. 588: All India Debt & Investment Survey-2019, Ministry of Statistics & Programme Implementation

 

This table shows us that rural indebtedness is higher than urban indebtedness, with 35 percent of rural households reporting being in debt compared to 22.4 percent of urban households. However, the average amount of debt of rural households is lower than their urban counterparts: Rs. 59,748 (rural) and Rs. 1,20,336 (urban).   

We have three different data points, if from 2018. In the intervening period the Covid-19 pandemic induced lockdowns precipitated a reverse migration and disrupted economic activity. We don’t have data on debt and investment for the post-pandemic period, but let us try and put these numbers in context.

The India supplement of the Oxfam Inequality report, released in January 2023, states that the gap between the rich and the poor in India has been rising. In 2020 the income share of the bottom 50 percent of the population is estimated to have fallen to 13 percent of the national income and less than 3 per cent of the total wealth. This is in stark contrast to the top 30 percent who own more than 90 per cent of the total wealth. Of this, the wealthiest 10 per cent own more than 72 percent of the total wealth while the top 1 percent own nearly 40.6 per cent of the total wealth in India.  

According to the Oxfam report, “The country still has the world’s highest number of poor at 228.9 million. On the other hand, the total number of billionaires in India increased from 102 in 2020 to 166 billionaires in 2022”. 
The impact of this wealth concentration has been “exceptionally poor diets, increase in debt and deaths”. Furthermore, “the concentration of wealth continues to be around primordial characteristics such as caste, with some communities such as the Scheduled Tribes (STs) suffering from physical remoteness and systematic exclusion”.

References
All India Debt and Investment Survey - 2019, NSS 77th Round, Ministry of Statistics & Programme Implementation. Please click here to read the report 
Survival of the Richest, the India Story, 2023, Oxfam India. Please click here for the report 


Inclusive Media for Change, 23 March, 2023


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