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Nirmala Sitharaman
The Finance Ministry on Tuesday said that there is no such proposal before the government on capital gains tax and called the reports on tweaks in capital gains tax as ‘baseless’, reported ET Now.
Bloomberg had reported that people familiar with the matter had said India is planning to revamp its direct tax laws, which currently consist of a complex set of rules and help Prime Minister Narendra Modi reduce widening income inequality, if he returns to power next year.
The report noted that India currently imposes a tax rate of up to 30 per cent on income, but it applies a lower tax rate to gains from specific asset classes like equity funds and stocks.
Economists often attribute India's tendency to rely on indirect taxes, such as consumption taxes, rather than direct taxes on capital as the primary reason for the country's growing income inequality.
Between 2018 and 2022, India saw the emergence of 70 new millionaires every day.
According to Oxfam International, the top 10 per cent of India's population owns 77 per cent of the national wealth, and government data shows that only about 6 per cent of the population pay income tax.