COUNTRIES find it easier to get rich once their neighbours already are. East Asia’s growth pattern has for decades been likened to a skein of geese, from Japan at the vanguard to laggards such as Myanmar at the rear. The same pattern can often be seen within big countries: over the past decade, for example, China’s poorer provinces have grown faster than their wealthier peers. India is different. Far from converging, its states are getting ever more unequal. A recent shake-up in the tax system might even make matters worse.Bar a few Mumbai penthouses and Bangalore startup offices, all parts of India are relatively poor by global standards. Taken together, its 1.3bn people make up roughly the third and fourth decile of the world’s population, with an income per head (adjusted for purchasing power) of $6,600 dollars. But that average conceals a vast gap. In Kerala, a southern state, the average resident has an annual income per head of $9,300, higher than Ukraine, and not...Continue reading
Artigos Relacionados
- Labour hopes to cut net migration to around 200,000
- Tax break for businesses made permanent
- Autumn Statement: Jeremy Hunt cuts National Insurance but tax burden still rises
- What the Autumn Statement means for you and your money
- Autumn Statement: Hunt denies tax cuts were pre-election giveaway
- Austerity warning for public services after tax cuts
- Barbie movie added £80m to UK economy and used 6,000 extras, Warner Bros says
- What a falling inflation rate means for your finances
- Interest rates expected to be held after small economic growth
- UK facing permanent higher taxes, IFS think tank says