Inequality Virus Report
What’s in the news?
- Oxfam, a confederation of 20 independent charitable organizations focusing on the alleviation of global poverty, has released its ‘Inequality Virus Report’.
- released on the opening day of the World Economic Forum in Davos.
Highlights of the Report
Deepening inequalities due to COVID-19
- Calling the coronavirus pandemic the world’s worst public health crisis in a hundred years, the report said it triggered an economic crisis comparable in scale only with the Great Depression of the 1930s.
- Indian billionaires increased their wealth by 35% during the lockdown to ₹3 trillion, ranking India after U.S., China, Germany, Russia and France.
- Out of these, the rise in fortunes for the top 100 billionaires since the lockdown in March is enough to give every one of the 138 million poorest Indian people a cheque for ₹94,045 each.
- The wealth of just the top 11 billionaires during the pandemic could easily sustain the MGNREGS or the Health Ministry for the next 10 years, stated the report, which underscored the deepening inequalities due to COVID-19 where the wealthiest escaped the worst impact of the pandemic while the poor faced joblessness, starvation and death.
Wealth Tax & Cess
- It recommended reintroducing the wealth tax and effecting a one-time COVID-19 cess of 4% on taxable income of over ₹10 lakh to help the economy recover from the lockdown.
- According to its estimate, wealth tax on the nation’s 954 richest families could raise the equivalent of 1% of the GDP.
Different forms of inequities
- The report also delved deeper into different forms of inequities, including educational, gender and health, which meant that facilities to wash hands and maintain distance, essential to prevent the spread of Coronavirus, was impossible for a majority of the population.
- According to the report, only 6% of the poorest 20% have access to non-shared sources of improved sanitation, compared to 93.4% of the top 20%.
- 59.6% of India’s population lived in a room or less, which meant that protocols necessary to prevent the spread of COVID-19 cannot be followed.
- While the government took steps to make COVID-19 services affordable by including them under Ayushman Bharat-PMJAY, the scheme only covered BPL (below poverty line) population leaving out the uninsured poor and the middle class.
Education
- Till October, 32 crores students were hit by closure of schools, of whom 84% resided in rural areas and 70% attended government schools.
- Close to 40 % of teachers in government schools feared that the prolonged school closure might lead to a third of the students not returning once schools reopened.
- It was estimated that out of school rates would double in a year. Dalits, Adivasis and Muslims were likely to see a higher rate of dropout. Girls were also most vulnerable as they were at risk of early and forced marriage, violence and early pregnancies.
Gender
- Unemployment of women rose by 15% from a pre-lockdown level of 18 %, which could result in a loss of India’s GDP of about 8 % or ₹15 trillion.
- Women who were employed before the lockdown were also 23.5 percentage points less likely to be re-employed compared to men in the post lockdown phase.
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