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81% Indians Concerned About Growing Wealth Gap: Pew Research Center

About 71% of Indian respondents viewed religious discrimination as a significant issue, while 69% believed caste and ethnic discrimination was a problem.
Daily wage workers in Dharavi, Mumbai. Photo: Flickr CC BY-NC-ND 2.0 (ATTRIBUTION-NONCOMMERCIAL-NODERIVS 2.0 GENERIC)
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New Delhi: A recent survey by the Pew Research Center has revealed that an overwhelming majority of Indians believe the gap between the rich and the poor is too wide. Approximately 81% of respondents expressed concerns about economic inequality, with 64% considering it a “very big problem.”

On Thursday (January 9), the Pew Research Center published its report, “Economic Inequality Seen as Major Challenge Around the World,” which is based on a survey spanning the Asia-Pacific region, Europe, Latin America, the Middle East and North Africa, North America, and sub-Saharan Africa.

Graph showseconomic inequality is a major problem 81% Indians say

Source: Pew Research Centre

In India, while 81% underlined that the gap between the rich and the poor is a problem in the country, 39% of the surveyed individuals underlined that economic system needs complete reform and 34% suggested major changes are required.

When asked what leads to this inequality, most people surveyed across the world point to the intersection of wealth and politics.

“A median of 54% of adults across the nations surveyed say the gap between the rich and the poor is a very big problem in their country. Another 30% say it is a moderately big problem,” the report says.

It adds, “A median of 60% believe that rich people having too much political influence contributes a great deal toward economic inequality.”

In terms of economic inequality, Indians attributed the wealth gap to various factors, including the political influence of the rich (79%), automation (73%), the education system (72%) and racial or ethnic discrimination (56%). Further, 65% agreed that different opportunities at birth leads to economic inequality.

71% Indians view religious discrimination as a serious issue

The survey, which polled 41,503 people across 36 countries, including 3,600 in the US, also found that Indians are deeply troubled by religious and caste discrimination.

According to Pew Centre research report, 57 percent of the respondents said religious discrimination was a very big problem and another 14 percent said it was a moderately big one.

Source: Pew Research Centre

About 71% of Indian respondents viewed religious discrimination as a significant issue (57% considered it very big and 14% considered it moderately big), while 69% believed caste and ethnic discrimination was a problem.

These concerns are echoed globally, with a median of 29% of adults across the surveyed countries saying religious discrimination is a “very big problem.”

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