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Union Budget 2024 | Modi’s tax plan is squeezing the middle class

Union Budget 2024 | Modi’s tax plan is squeezing the middle class

In this election, the rich-poor gap among Modi voters narrowed significantly. The faith in Modinomics is eroding, even though it has done its job of elevating asset prices — and turning software code-writers into day traders.

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Last Updated : 30 July 2024, 05:48 IST
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Mind you, it’s still a tiny section of the 1.4 billion (140 crore) population, sandwiched between 800 million (80 crore) Indians claiming free rations and billionaires spending $600 million (Rs 5,024 crore) on weddings. Eight out of 10 Indian workers don’t earn a regular wage. Of those who do, fewer than 10 per cent make more than $600 (Rs 50,241) a month. How much more does Modi want to squeeze people who, believing in a bountiful “Amrit Kaal,” have been getting deeper into debt to make ends meet amid high inflation? Retail loans, including credit card and other unsecured debt, are now 1.5 times as high as bank credit to industry for working capital or expansion. In pre-Modi days, these loans were only two-fifths of what banks gave to firms.

Meanwhile, a low-tax regime for firms is not encouraging new investment. A hefty 2019 rebate, which has cost the exchequer $100 billion (Rs 8,37,360 crore), has added to corporate profits, but without meaningful employment creation. In 2020, New Delhi announced a further $24 billion (Rs 2,00,963 crore) in production-linked incentives for manufacturers. They’ve only added 850,000 positions so far. This is when India needs 8 million of them annually. In this budget, the government offered $24 billion for jobs and apprenticeships, finally acknowledging an employment crisis that cut into Modi’s votes.

In 2014 and 2019, a disproportionately higher share of rich and the middle-class voters backed Modi, compared with the poor. His more affluent cheerleaders had no problems when he stalled the economy in 2016 by an overnight ban on 86 per cent of the country's cash. A few months later, he imposed a poorly constructed GST that drove out smaller firms from production networks. During the 2020 pandemic, Modi sent millions of urban, blue-collar workers back to their villages at a four-hour notice. The three shocks shut down 6 million (60 lakh) informal enterprises.

All through, the middle class voted for mollycoddling of large firms and neglect of final demand. But in this election, the rich-poor gap among Modi voters narrowed significantly. The faith in Modinomics is eroding, even though it has done its job of elevating asset prices — and turning software code-writers into day traders.

Just a couple of months back, at the height of a bruising poll campaign, India’s Hindu right-wing prime minister was accusing the opposition of plotting to take away private property for redistribution among the country’s minority Muslims. Now he’s doing the taking, and his fan club has to pay — with or without “Amrit Kaal.”

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