Income Distribution:India, Hyderabad Funds

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[[File: Years to double nominal per capita income, state-wise1.jpg|Years to double nominal per capita income, state-wise; Graphic courtesy: [http://epaperbeta.timesofindia.com//Gallery.aspx?id=01_03_2016_004_016_001&type=P&artUrl=SIKKIM-WILL-DOUBLE-YOUR-INCOME-FASTEST-01032016004016&eid=31973 ''The Times of India''], March 1, 2016|frame|500px]]
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[[File: Years to double nominal per capita income, state-wise2.jpg| Years to double nominal per capita income, state-wise; Graphic courtesy: [http://epaperbeta.timesofindia.com//Gallery.aspx?id=01_03_2016_004_016_001&type=P&artUrl=SIKKIM-WILL-DOUBLE-YOUR-INCOME-FASTEST-01032016004016&eid=31973 ''The Times of India''], March 1, 2016|frame|500px]]
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[[File: Salary increase, Government of India Secretary and Peon, 1991-2015.jpg|Salary increase, Government of India Secretary and Peon, 1991-2015; Graphic courtesy: [http://epaperbeta.timesofindia.com//Gallery.aspx?id=01_03_2016_009_041_002&type=P&artUrl=YOUR-INCOME-HAS-GROWN-FASTER-MUCH-FASTER-THAN-01032016009041&eid=31973 ''The Times of India''], March 1, 2016|frame|500px]]
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[[File: Highest paid CEO and increase in per capita income, 1991-2015.jpg|Highest paid CEO and increase in per capita income, 1991-2015; Graphic courtesy: [http://epaperbeta.timesofindia.com//Gallery.aspx?id=01_03_2016_009_041_002&type=P&artUrl=YOUR-INCOME-HAS-GROWN-FASTER-MUCH-FASTER-THAN-01032016009041&eid=31973 ''The Times of India''], March 1, 2016|frame|500px]]
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[[Category:India|I]]
 
[[Category:Development|I]]
 
[[Category:Government|I]]
 
=Disparities=
 
==Rich getting richer/ 2010==
 
 
[http://epaper.timesofindia.com/Default/Client.asp?Daily=CAP&showST=true&login=default&pub=TOI&Enter=true&Skin=TOINEW&AW=1393708348876  Times of  India]
 
  
  
120k Indians hold a third of national income
 
  
Marks Increase Of More Than 50% Over 2008 Figure: Study
 
  
Rukmini Shrinivasan 
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=The case, in brief=
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==1954-2013: a history of the case==
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[[File: royal property.jpg|Royal property: The Hyderabad Fund Case; <br/> Graphic courtesy: [http://epaperbeta.timesofindia.com//Gallery.aspx?id=19_03_2015_015_006_002&type=P&artUrl=Indias-chances-to-recover-Nizams-funds-brighten-19032015015006&eid=31808 ''The Times of India'']|frame|500px]]
  
New Delhi: Last year [2010?] may have been a cruel year for much of the country with slow growth and double-digit food inflation, but India’s high net worth individuals (HNWIs) prospered — just over 120,000 in number, or 0.01% of the population, their combined worth is close to one-third of India’s Gross National Income (GNI).
 
  
HNWIs, in this context, are defined as those having investable assets of $1 million or more, excluding primary residence, collectibles, consumables, and consumer durables. According to the 2009 Asia-Pacific Wealth Report, brought out by financial services firms Capgemini and Merrill Lynch Wealth Management, at the peak of the recession in 2008, India had 84,000 HNWIs with a combined net worth of $310 billion. To put that figure in perspective, it was just under a third of India’s market capitalization, that is, the total value of all companies listed on the Bombay Stock Exchange — as of end-March 2008. The average worth of each HNWI was Rs 16.6 crore.
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'''See graphic''':
  
To get a fix on just how rarefied a level it puts them in, we did some simple calculations that threw up stunning numbers. It would take an average urban Indian 2,238 years, based on the monthly per capita expenditure estimates in the 2007-8 National Sample Survey, to achieve a net worth equal to that of the average HNWI. And that’s assuming that this average urban Indian just accumulates all his income without consuming anything. A similar calculation shows that an average rural Indian would have to wait a fair bit longer — 3,814 years!
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'' Royal property: The Hyderabad Fund Case ''
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According to the firms’ 2010 World Wealth Report, India now has 126,700 HNWIs, an increase of more than 50% over the 2008 number.
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While the figure for combined net worth is not available, it seems safe to assume that as a class not only have India’s super-rich recouped their 2008 losses, they have even made gains over their pre-crisis (2007) positions. In 2007, 123,000 HNWIs were worth a combined $437 million.
 
  
Meanwhile, in 2009 alone, an estimated 13.6 million more people in India became poor or remained in poverty than would have been the case had the 2008 growth rates continued, according to the United Nations Department of Economic and Social Affairs (UNDESA). Also, an estimated 33.6 million more people in India became poor or remained in poverty over 2008 and 2009 than would have been poor had the pre-crisis (2004-7) growth rates been maintained over these two years.  
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==2015: London HC ruling==
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[[File: the case.jpg|The case inside|frame|500px]]
  
The 2009 Asia-Pacific Wealth Report notes that the HNWI population in India is also expected to be more than three times its 2008 size by the year 2018, with emergent wealth playing a key role. Like China, relatively few among the current HNWI population (13%, compared to 22% in Japan) have inherited their wealth and even fewer (9%) are over the age of 66.
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[http://epaperbeta.timesofindia.com//Article.aspx?eid=31808&articlexml=Court-opens-door-for-India-to-regain-Hyd-19032015001013 ''The Times of India'']
==2014: Income inequality highest since 1922==
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[http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/business/india-business/india-has-gone-from-british-raj-to-billionaire-raj-report/articleshow/60383805.cms  India has gone from British Raj to Billionaire Raj: Report, Sep 6, 2017: The Times of India]
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[[File: Income distribution and inequalities in India, 1920-2014.jpg|Income distribution and inequalities in India, 1920-2014; [http://epaperbeta.timesofindia.com/Article.aspx?eid=31808&articlexml=India-has-gone-from-British-Raj-to-Billionaire-06092017025016 The Times of India], September 6, 2017|frame|500px]]
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Mar 19 2015
  
'''HIGHLIGHTS'''
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Sachin Parashar
  
The top 1% of earners captured less than 21% of total income in the late 1930s in India
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''' Court opens door for India to regain Hyd funds from Pak '''
  
It dropped to 6% in early 80s
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The 67-year-old Indo-Pak Hyderabad Funds saga has taken another turn with London's High Court of Justice ruling that Pakistan no longer has sovereign immunity over the State of Hyderabad's wealth.
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All these years, India was forced to deal with Pakistan bilaterally on recovery of the funds because in 1957 Islamabad invoked its right to sovereign immunity from court proceedings in Britain.
  
Now, it is 22%, highest since 1922, when the income tax law was conceived
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Hyderabad Funds refers to the over £1 million (£1,007,940 and 9 shillings) transferred from the erstwhile State of Hyderabad's bank account in London's National Westminster Bank to the account of the then Pakistan High Commissioner to UK, Habib Ibrahim Rahimtoola, on September 20, 1948.This was two days after the Nizam decided to accede to India. The money is now valued at around £35 million (rough ly Rs 322 crore) and has three claimants -Pakistan, India and the Nizam's family . As the successor state to Nizam's Hyderabad, India claims the Hyderabad Funds. Faced with no prospect of recovering it through the courts, the Indian Cabinet has been authorizing the government since the 1960s to pursue efforts for an out-of-court settlement with Pakistan and the Nizam's heirs.
  
Income inequality is shown to have fallen to the least in the 1970s and the 1980sIncome inequality is shown to have fallen to the least in the 1970s and the 1980s
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In 2013, Islamabad decided to claim the funds and reopened legal proceedings. The court ruled that if Pakistan subjected itself to the UK court's jurisdiction it stood to lose its state immunity .
  
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With this, India's chances of a recovery through the legal route brightened. India insists the funds belonged to the Nizam's state, not part of his private assets. The transfer to Rahimtoola was on instructions of the Nizam's finance minister, probably an authorized signatory to the account. He did it without the Nizam's consent. “These instructions were irregular.The finance minister had no power to withdraw the money without the Nizam's express sanction or that of his government. The ruler's instructions to retransfer the funds weren't complied with,“ the government had said earlier.
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The recent British court ruling means the dispute over the ownership of funds can be decided through the legal route, Islamabad having lost the right to block proceedings.
  
Inequality in India may be at its highest level since 1922, when the country's income tax law was conceived, with 22% income accruing to the top 1% income earners, a new paper released by economists Thomas Piketty and Lucas Chancel showed.
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In January, 2015, the UK court set aside Pakistan's plea to discontinue proceedings, and joined all interested parties, including India and the Nizam's grandsons. The court seems to have held Pakistan's actions unreasonable and ordered it to pay the legal costs incurred by the bank, India and the two grandsons who had opposed the Pakistani plea to discontinue proceedings. Interpreting the decision, a leading UK legal firm BrownRudnick emphasized that sovereign states must take great care not to take steps that can constitute a waiver of their sovereign immunity from jurisdiction.
  
"The top 1% of earners captured less than 21% of total income in the late 1930s, before dropping to 6% in early 1980s and rising to 22% today," said the paper titled 'Indian income inequality, 1922-2014: From British Raj to Billionaire Raj?', a revised version of which was released.
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==2019/ £35m in UK bank belongs to heirs, India: UK HC==
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[https://epaper.timesgroup.com/Olive/ODN/TimesOfIndia/shared/ShowArticle.aspx?doc=TOIDEL/2019/10/03&entity=Ar00501&sk=88A2BA18&mode=text  Naomi Canton, Oct 3, 2019: ''The Times of India'']
  
Incidentally, the 1970s and the 1980s, when income inequality is shown to have fallen to the least was the period when India's GDP and per capita income growth rates fell to one of the lowest levels. The trend in India is in line with the experience of other major economies.
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[[File: The Hyderabad Funds.jpg| The Hyderabad Funds <br/> From: [https://epaper.timesgroup.com/Olive/ODN/TimesOfIndia/shared/ShowArticle.aspx?doc=TOIDEL/2019/10/03&entity=Ar00501&sk=88A2BA18&mode=text  Naomi Canton, Oct 3, 2019: ''The Times of India'']|frame|500px]]
  
The paper shows that between 1980 and 2014, income of top 0.1% income earners in France and China rose six times faster than the income of bottom 50%.
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The UK high court ruled in favour of India and the titular eighth Nizam of Hyderabad and his younger brother in a case they had been fighting against Pakistan relating to who has the rights to £35 million (Rs 306 crore) stashed away in a British bank account since Partition.
In India, the growth rate of top 1% was 13 times higher, while it was nearly 77 times higher in the US.
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The paper from Picketty and Chancel is expected to trigger debate about the state of inequality in India and whether benefits of higher growth have spread to all classes.
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India, the Nizam and his brother, who are the grandsons of the seventh Nizam, have a confidential settlement on how to split the money.
  
The two economists recognise the global nature of income inequality but state that: "India's dynamics are striking: It is the country with the highest gap between the growth of the top 1% and growth of the full population."
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The dispute centred on a corpus of £1 million and one guinea that on September 20, 1948 was transferred by the seventh Nizam’s finance minister, Nawab Moin Nawaz Jung, from a government bank account to another in London held by Pakistan’s then high commissioner to the UK, Habib Ibrahim Rahimtoola. This was during the Indian annexation of the princely state of Hyderabad.
  
The paper added that the top 0.1% income earners represented less than 8 lakh individuals in 2013-14, which is less than the population of Gurgaon. "It is a sharp contrast with the 389 million individuals that made up the bottom half of the adult population in late 2013."
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The grandson of the seventh Nizam, Mukarram Jah, and his younger brother Muffakham Jah have laid claim to the fund, saying it had been gifted to them in a trust set up by their grandfather on April 24, 1963. Pakistan, on the other hand, says it was a payment made by the erstwhile princely state to Pakistan for arming Hyderabad when it was about to be invaded by India. Justice Marcus Smith ruled on Wednesday the seventh Nizam was beneficially entitled to the £35 million fund, as were the princes and India.
  
Economists say that income distribution data for India is very difficult to find. A study done by Delhi-based NCAER dates to 2004-05. "Income tax data is not applicable (for measuring income inequality) in a country like India," said Bibek Debroy, member of NITI Aayog, a government think tank.
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''' Second victory for India & Salve '''
  
"The national sample survey (NSS) data indicated that in 2004-05 inequality in India increased sharply. The NSS measures consumption and underestimates the degree of inequality," said Pronab Sen, former chief statistician of India. "If you could measure income distribution, which very few do, it is much worse."
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On July 8, 1954, the seventh Nizam together with the state of Hyderabad issued a writ before the UK high court against Pakistan and Rahimtoola, asking for the £1 million to be returned to them.
Sen said, India's fast economic growth had helped in reducing absolute poverty. "But relative inequality has worsened."
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Based on their calculations, Piketty and Chancel have concluded that there was a moderate rise of the middle class during 1980-2014, when the economy was liberalised and income growth rates picked up.
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On July 19, 1955, Rahimtoola got the writ set aside on the premise that the English courts were interfering with Pakistan’s sovereign immunity. The money has stayed frozen in a British bank account ever since and grown to £35 million in the span of seven decades.
  
"'Shining India' corresponds to the top 10% of the population (approximately 80 million adult individuals in 2014) rather than the middle 40%. Relatively speaking, the shining decades for the middle 40% group corresponded to the 1951-1980 period, when this group captured a much higher share of total growth (49%) than it did over the past 40 years," they said.
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It was the second highprofile victory for Harish Salve while representing India in a case since he won a reprieve for Kulbhushan Jadhav at the International Court of Justice. Khawar Qureshi QC was Pakistan’s barrister in both cases.
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“In 2013, Pakistan felt that with the distance of time, it would bring action against the bank and the bank would pay and it would walk away. But the bank said there were two other claimants — the princes and India. Pakistan issued a notice of discontinuance, but we argued it was against the interests of justice to withdraw and the case came back. Whether they will appeal, I don’t know,” Salve said after the verdict.
  
The paper's authors also said they did not have the capacity to put an end to the debates over the impact of reforms on inequality or poverty.
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He praised Justice Marcus Smith for drawing up a 140-page judgment on such a complex case in just three months. The two-week trial had ended in June.
  
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“We had a good case. We won both times,” Salve said, referring to the ICJ verdict on Jadhav.
  
=="Inequality should be measured on income per capita"==
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“The fund was held by Pakistan through her high commissioner in the UK on trust for Nizam VII and his successors in title. The fund was not held by Rahimtoola personally, nor did either Pakistan or Rahimtoola have any beneficial interest in the fund,” Justice Smith ruled.
  
[http://epaperbeta.timesofindia.com//Article.aspx?eid=31808&articlexml=Govt-data-on-inequality-misleading-21012015015005 ''The Times of India'']
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Salve said: “Historians will be interested in Pakistan publicly acknowledging it was supplying arms. Whether to Nizam’s army or the Razakars militia, I don’t know.
  
Jan 21 2015
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===Over 120 heirs to share fund worth Rs 306 crore===
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[https://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/city/hyderabad/over-120-heirs-to-share-hyderabad-fund/articleshow/71413391.cms  Syed Akbar, Oct 3, 2019: ''The Times of India'']
  
''' Govt data on inequality misleading '''
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[[File: Money was transferred to Pakistan envoy account.jpg|Money was transferred to Pakistan envoy account <br/> From: [https://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/city/hyderabad/over-120-heirs-to-share-hyderabad-fund/articleshow/71413391.cms  Syed Akbar, Oct 3, 2019: ''The Times of India'']|frame|500px]]
  
Inequality in South Asia is much more glaring than what government data shows because standard yardsticks of measuring income don't reveal the true picture, says a World Bank report `Addressing Inequality in South Asia', released on Tuesday .
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[[File: Timeline for Hyderabad Fund Case, 1948- 2019.jpg|Timeline for Hyderabad Fund Case, 1948- 2019 <br/> From: [https://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/city/hyderabad/over-120-heirs-to-share-hyderabad-fund/articleshow/71413391.cms  Syed Akbar, Oct 3, 2019: ''The Times of India'']|frame|500px]]
For instance, the Gini coefficient -the standard measure to gauge income inequality -ranges from 0.28 to 0.40 in this region, suggesting a level of inequality much lower than in countries like Argentina, Malaysia, Chile or Brazil. The caveat to this comparison, however, is that in South Asia inequality is measured on the basis of consumption per capita while in advanced economies as well as Latin America, it is based on income per capita. The consumption-based approach doesn't give the true picture of inequality as it does not cover the spending habits of the richest sections of the population. This is because in these countries, the typical questionnaire for surveys that measure income is focussed on a relatively basic basket of goods and services.
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Based on a 59th round NSSO survey that was focussed on measuring wealth (land, building, machinery , financial assets and so) the report estimates that the average net worth of the top 10% of the population in India was 380 times that of the bottom 10%. The net worth could support consumption for 23 years for the top bracket and less than three months for the bottom one.
 
  
The huge income difference between the richest and the poorest also means a wide degree of difference in access to basic needs like nutrition, health care and education. Because of these differences, the distribution of wealth in the high economic growth period following liberalization has been more favourable to a much smaller section of society , the report said.
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''' Key Highlights '''
  
The report said that the total billionaire wealth represented about 10% of India's GDP in 2012, which was an outlier in the ratio of billionaire wealth to GDP among economies of similar development levels. Interestingly , 40% of India's billionaire wealth is estimated to be inheritance while 60% originates from `rent-thick sectors' such as real estate, infrastructure, construction, mining and telecommunications.
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The Nizam estate had a secret understanding with Indian govt and as per the deal, the amount will be shared between the claimants.
  
Evidently , for a majority of its population, India is not the land of equal opportunity .The income share of India's top 0.01% was less than 0.4% in 1980, but rose to 1.5 to 2% by the end of the 1990s. During this period, the income share of the top 0.1% was 3 to 4.5%, suggesting growth was strongly biased towards the ultra-rich. Up to 2010, India had the gentlest rate of poverty decline in South Asia.
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Whether the Indian govt will claim its share is not known as the deal has been kept under wraps.
  
The report classified the Indian population into three groups -the poor, the vulnerable (people just above the poverty line) and the middle class. Between 200405 and 2009-10, about 40% of poor households moved above the poverty line. Similarly about 11% of poor and vulnerable moved into the middle class during the same period. Alarmingly , during the same period, about 14% of the non-poor groups slipped into poverty .
 
  
The lack of social security and access to basic social needs like health care, food security and education is the main reason behind this cycle of poverty .
 
  
= Rural households’ incomes=
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HYDERABAD: With the Business and Property Courts of England and Wales ruling that India and legal heirs of Mir Osman Ali Khan, the last Nizam of princely state of Hyderabad, are entitled to the £35 million (Rs 306 crore) held up in the NatWest Bank since September 1948 , the focus now shifts to the distribution of money among the claimants.
==2011-13 ==
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[http://epaperbeta.timesofindia.com/Article.aspx?eid=31808&articlexml=92-village-homes-run-on-less-than-Rs-04072015028031 ''The Times of India''], Jul 04 2015
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[[File: Rural households Monthly income and employment profile.jpg| Rural households: Monthly income and employment profile;Graphic courtesy: [http://epaperbeta.timesofindia.com/Article.aspx?eid=31808&articlexml=92-village-homes-run-on-less-than-Rs-04072015028031 ''The Times of India''], Jul 04 2015|frame|500px]]
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According to sources in the Nizam’s family, the money will be shared by Indian government, and the Nizam estate represented by Mukarram Jah and Muffakham Jah, grandsons of the Nizam, and 120 others who were part of the “estate”.  
[[File: Percentage of rural households with no land in India, statewise, 2011.jpg| Percentage of rural households with no land in India, statewise, 2011; Graphic courtesy: [http://epaperbeta.timesofindia.com/Gallery.aspx?id=30_10_2015_013_026_003&type=P&artUrl=STATOISTICS-NOWHERE-TO-LAND-30102015013026&eid=31808 ''The Times of India''], October 30, 2015|frame|500px]]
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[[File: Deprived rural population, state-wise Chhattisgarh, Meghalaya, Odisha, Nagaland and West Bengal.jpg.jpg|Deprived rural population, state-wise: Chhattisgarh, Meghalaya, Odisha, Nagaland and West Bengal; Graphic courtesy: [http://epaperbeta.timesofindia.com/Gallery.aspx?id=04_07_2015_028_021_001&type=P&artUrl=THE-TIMES-OF-INDIA-04072015028021&eid=31808 ''The Times of India'']|frame|500px]]
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[[File: Deprived rural population, state-wise Bihar, MP, Mizoram, Jharkhand and Manipur.jpg.jpg| Deprived rural population, state-wise: Bihar, MP, Mizoram, Jharkhand and Manipur; Graphic courtesy: [http://epaperbeta.timesofindia.com/Gallery.aspx?id=04_07_2015_028_021_001&type=P&artUrl=THE-TIMES-OF-INDIA-04072015028021&eid=31808 ''The Times of India'']|frame|500px]]
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Subodh Varma
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Nizam’s another grandson, Najaf Ali Khan, who heads the Nizam’s Family Welfare Association, had impleaded in the case along with about 120 legal heirs of the former ruler. They all now form part of the Nizam estate, which was supported by India, against Pakistan’s claim over the money, popularly known as Hyderabad Fund.
  
''' 92% village homes run on less than Rs 10,000 a month '''
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The Nizam estate had a secret understanding with Indian government and as per the deal, the amount will be shared between the claimants. Whether the Indian government will claim its share is not known as the deal has been kept under wraps.
  
Giving a more storied picture of rural India, the Socio-Economic and Caste Census (SECC) released says that a staggering 92% of rural households reported their maximum income below Rs 10,000 per month. Nearly three quarters of all rural households said that the income of the highest earning member was Rs 5,000 or less.
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According to city historians, more than money, it was a prestige issue for India and Pakistan. However, for the cash-poor claimants of the Nizam family, Wednesday’s judgment has come as a bonanza. Except for a couple of members of the erstwhile royal family, most claimants struggle to make both ends meet, family sources told TOI.  
The SECC was conducted during 2011-12 with some states completing it in 2013, due to a lengthy process of seeking objections on collected data. It found that about 18 crore households lived in rural areas, including outgrowths of towns.
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The SECC found that over 9 crore households were living by doing casual manual labour. That's more than half of all rural households. Cultivators were reported as numbering 5.39 crore households, making up about 30%. The muchheralded non-agricultural enterprises were providing livelihood to just 29 lakh households, a meagre 1.6% of the total.
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The secret deal notwithstanding, distribution of Hyderabad Fund is also subject to court’s approval. Justice Marcus Smith, who delivered the judgment, had noted “Nizam VII was beneficially entitled to the Fund and those claiming in right of Nizam VII — the princes and India — are entitled to have the sum paid out to their order. I will leave it to the parties to frame an appropriate form of order for my approval”. This in other words means that the claimants should sit with the Indian government and strike at an understanding to be presented before the judge for final approval before disbursal of the money.  
  
There seems to be a significant difference with Census 2011 figures. The Census counts people, and according to it, in 2011 there were 9.2 crore cultivators and 8.1 crore agricultural labourers. This would translate to about 2 crore cultivator households and 1.7 crore agricultural labourer households.
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Family sources said only those members of the Nizam’s family who had impleaded in the case will get the money. The share will be known only after the family submits the claim details to the court. And if Pakistan prefers an appeal, the legal battle will continue, and the money will remain with the NatWest Bank.  
  
However, Abhijit Sen, former member of the Planning Commission who was involved in designing the survey, told TOI that this comparison should not be done because the SECC asked about incomes while the Census asked about work.
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=What Pakistan owes India=
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[http://epaperbeta.timesofindia.com//Article.aspx?eid=31808&articlexml=Hyd-funds-Pak-to-pay-India-150k-legal-23032015007033 ''The Times of India'']
  
“Also, everybody in a household doesn't work. So converting Census-based worker figures to households will not give a true picture,“ he added.
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Mar 23 2015
  
But on one issue, the SECC is perhaps better reflecting the lives of rural people. The Census gives figures for `agricultural labourers' whereas the SECC gives figures for those working as casual manual labourers, which is not confined to agricultural labour alone. Due to pressure on land,fragmentation, and low returns, a vast army of people, both men and women, are turning to any kind of casual labour to earn a living.
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''' Hyd funds: Pak to pay India £150k legal cost '''
  
“Each rural household will have different kinds of casual workers. The SECC is reflecting this reality,“ Sen said.
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With Pakistan no longer enjoying state immunity over Hyderabad Funds, India has initiated discussions with the Nizam's heirs to bring back the 35 million pound sterling lying in a UK bank for the past 67 years. The Indian government has been emboldened by the fact that the English high court has not just ruled that Islamabad no longer had immunity over the funds but also, as reports from London said on Sunday , asked Pakistan to pay India a compensation of 150,000 pounds for the legal costs incurred by the latter.
  
SECC reports that only about 10% of rural households have salaried jobs. Of these, about two thirds are in public sector, and a third, 6.4 lakh in all, work regular private sector jobs. And, less than 5% of the rural households pay income tax or professional tax. This is mainly because agricultural income is not taxed and with over 92% households earning less than Rs.10,000, most don't qualify .
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Official sources said “initial discussions“ had taken place over the issue with the Nizam's family , the third claimant to the erstwhile Hyderabad ruler's money which was transferred to the bank account of then Pakistani high commissioner to the UK in 1948.
  
=Urban India=
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The Union Cabinet in 2008 had passed a resolution authorizing the government to pursue an out of court settlement with Pakistan and the Nizam's family for the money seen by India as its “sacred inheritance''. The fact that Pakistan had sovereign immunity over the money , bestowed on it by the House of Lords in 1957, made it impossible for India to achieve this. The government believes that a window has now opened to take control of the money as the English High Court has ruled that Pakistan did not have immunity anymore as it had itself taken legal recourse to settle the issue of ownership once and for all.
==No source of income for 35 lakh households==
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[http://epaperbeta.timesofindia.com/Article.aspx?eid=31808&articlexml=35-lakh-urban-families-have-no-income-04072015028032 ''The Times of India''], Jul 04 2015
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''' 35 lakh urban families have no income '''
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Faced with Pakistan's at tempt to recover the Hyderabad Funds through a suo motu legal effort in 2013, India had no choice but to join the proceedings. Realizing later that it could lose its sovereign immunity because of the legal claim it had made to recover the full amount, Pakistan sought to discontinue from the proceedings but this plea was set aside by the court. The court, in fact, asked Pakistan to pay the legal costs incurred by the National Westminster Bank, which holds the money , India and the two grandsons of the Nizam who had opposed the Pakistani plea to abruptly discontinue the proceedings.
  
At least 35 lakh families in cities and towns have no source of income while 90 lakh households are headed by women, according to raw and unreleased data from the Socio-Economic and Caste Census in urban areas, reports Dipak Dash. About 1 crore households own at least one of four items -fridges, landline phones, washing machines and twowheelers; 86 lakh households own all these.
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Latest revision as of 19:00, 2 June 2021

This is a collection of articles archived for the excellence of their content.



Contents

[edit] The case, in brief

[edit] 1954-2013: a history of the case

Royal property: The Hyderabad Fund Case;
Graphic courtesy: The Times of India


See graphic:

Royal property: The Hyderabad Fund Case


[edit] 2015: London HC ruling

The case inside

The Times of India

Mar 19 2015

Sachin Parashar

Court opens door for India to regain Hyd funds from Pak

The 67-year-old Indo-Pak Hyderabad Funds saga has taken another turn with London's High Court of Justice ruling that Pakistan no longer has sovereign immunity over the State of Hyderabad's wealth. All these years, India was forced to deal with Pakistan bilaterally on recovery of the funds because in 1957 Islamabad invoked its right to sovereign immunity from court proceedings in Britain.

Hyderabad Funds refers to the over £1 million (£1,007,940 and 9 shillings) transferred from the erstwhile State of Hyderabad's bank account in London's National Westminster Bank to the account of the then Pakistan High Commissioner to UK, Habib Ibrahim Rahimtoola, on September 20, 1948.This was two days after the Nizam decided to accede to India. The money is now valued at around £35 million (rough ly Rs 322 crore) and has three claimants -Pakistan, India and the Nizam's family . As the successor state to Nizam's Hyderabad, India claims the Hyderabad Funds. Faced with no prospect of recovering it through the courts, the Indian Cabinet has been authorizing the government since the 1960s to pursue efforts for an out-of-court settlement with Pakistan and the Nizam's heirs.

In 2013, Islamabad decided to claim the funds and reopened legal proceedings. The court ruled that if Pakistan subjected itself to the UK court's jurisdiction it stood to lose its state immunity .

With this, India's chances of a recovery through the legal route brightened. India insists the funds belonged to the Nizam's state, not part of his private assets. The transfer to Rahimtoola was on instructions of the Nizam's finance minister, probably an authorized signatory to the account. He did it without the Nizam's consent. “These instructions were irregular.The finance minister had no power to withdraw the money without the Nizam's express sanction or that of his government. The ruler's instructions to retransfer the funds weren't complied with,“ the government had said earlier. The recent British court ruling means the dispute over the ownership of funds can be decided through the legal route, Islamabad having lost the right to block proceedings.

In January, 2015, the UK court set aside Pakistan's plea to discontinue proceedings, and joined all interested parties, including India and the Nizam's grandsons. The court seems to have held Pakistan's actions unreasonable and ordered it to pay the legal costs incurred by the bank, India and the two grandsons who had opposed the Pakistani plea to discontinue proceedings. Interpreting the decision, a leading UK legal firm BrownRudnick emphasized that sovereign states must take great care not to take steps that can constitute a waiver of their sovereign immunity from jurisdiction.

[edit] 2019/ £35m in UK bank belongs to heirs, India: UK HC

Naomi Canton, Oct 3, 2019: The Times of India

The UK high court ruled in favour of India and the titular eighth Nizam of Hyderabad and his younger brother in a case they had been fighting against Pakistan relating to who has the rights to £35 million (Rs 306 crore) stashed away in a British bank account since Partition.

India, the Nizam and his brother, who are the grandsons of the seventh Nizam, have a confidential settlement on how to split the money.

The dispute centred on a corpus of £1 million and one guinea that on September 20, 1948 was transferred by the seventh Nizam’s finance minister, Nawab Moin Nawaz Jung, from a government bank account to another in London held by Pakistan’s then high commissioner to the UK, Habib Ibrahim Rahimtoola. This was during the Indian annexation of the princely state of Hyderabad.

The grandson of the seventh Nizam, Mukarram Jah, and his younger brother Muffakham Jah have laid claim to the fund, saying it had been gifted to them in a trust set up by their grandfather on April 24, 1963. Pakistan, on the other hand, says it was a payment made by the erstwhile princely state to Pakistan for arming Hyderabad when it was about to be invaded by India. Justice Marcus Smith ruled on Wednesday the seventh Nizam was beneficially entitled to the £35 million fund, as were the princes and India.

Second victory for India & Salve

On July 8, 1954, the seventh Nizam together with the state of Hyderabad issued a writ before the UK high court against Pakistan and Rahimtoola, asking for the £1 million to be returned to them.

On July 19, 1955, Rahimtoola got the writ set aside on the premise that the English courts were interfering with Pakistan’s sovereign immunity. The money has stayed frozen in a British bank account ever since and grown to £35 million in the span of seven decades.

It was the second highprofile victory for Harish Salve while representing India in a case since he won a reprieve for Kulbhushan Jadhav at the International Court of Justice. Khawar Qureshi QC was Pakistan’s barrister in both cases. “In 2013, Pakistan felt that with the distance of time, it would bring action against the bank and the bank would pay and it would walk away. But the bank said there were two other claimants — the princes and India. Pakistan issued a notice of discontinuance, but we argued it was against the interests of justice to withdraw and the case came back. Whether they will appeal, I don’t know,” Salve said after the verdict.

He praised Justice Marcus Smith for drawing up a 140-page judgment on such a complex case in just three months. The two-week trial had ended in June.

“We had a good case. We won both times,” Salve said, referring to the ICJ verdict on Jadhav.

“The fund was held by Pakistan through her high commissioner in the UK on trust for Nizam VII and his successors in title. The fund was not held by Rahimtoola personally, nor did either Pakistan or Rahimtoola have any beneficial interest in the fund,” Justice Smith ruled.

Salve said: “Historians will be interested in Pakistan publicly acknowledging it was supplying arms. Whether to Nizam’s army or the Razakars militia, I don’t know.”

[edit] Over 120 heirs to share fund worth Rs 306 crore

Syed Akbar, Oct 3, 2019: The Times of India

Money was transferred to Pakistan envoy account
From: Syed Akbar, Oct 3, 2019: The Times of India
Timeline for Hyderabad Fund Case, 1948- 2019
From: Syed Akbar, Oct 3, 2019: The Times of India


Key Highlights

The Nizam estate had a secret understanding with Indian govt and as per the deal, the amount will be shared between the claimants.

Whether the Indian govt will claim its share is not known as the deal has been kept under wraps.


HYDERABAD: With the Business and Property Courts of England and Wales ruling that India and legal heirs of Mir Osman Ali Khan, the last Nizam of princely state of Hyderabad, are entitled to the £35 million (Rs 306 crore) held up in the NatWest Bank since September 1948 , the focus now shifts to the distribution of money among the claimants.

According to sources in the Nizam’s family, the money will be shared by Indian government, and the Nizam estate represented by Mukarram Jah and Muffakham Jah, grandsons of the Nizam, and 120 others who were part of the “estate”.

Nizam’s another grandson, Najaf Ali Khan, who heads the Nizam’s Family Welfare Association, had impleaded in the case along with about 120 legal heirs of the former ruler. They all now form part of the Nizam estate, which was supported by India, against Pakistan’s claim over the money, popularly known as Hyderabad Fund.

The Nizam estate had a secret understanding with Indian government and as per the deal, the amount will be shared between the claimants. Whether the Indian government will claim its share is not known as the deal has been kept under wraps.

According to city historians, more than money, it was a prestige issue for India and Pakistan. However, for the cash-poor claimants of the Nizam family, Wednesday’s judgment has come as a bonanza. Except for a couple of members of the erstwhile royal family, most claimants struggle to make both ends meet, family sources told TOI.

The secret deal notwithstanding, distribution of Hyderabad Fund is also subject to court’s approval. Justice Marcus Smith, who delivered the judgment, had noted “Nizam VII was beneficially entitled to the Fund and those claiming in right of Nizam VII — the princes and India — are entitled to have the sum paid out to their order. I will leave it to the parties to frame an appropriate form of order for my approval”. This in other words means that the claimants should sit with the Indian government and strike at an understanding to be presented before the judge for final approval before disbursal of the money.

Family sources said only those members of the Nizam’s family who had impleaded in the case will get the money. The share will be known only after the family submits the claim details to the court. And if Pakistan prefers an appeal, the legal battle will continue, and the money will remain with the NatWest Bank.

[edit] What Pakistan owes India

The Times of India

Mar 23 2015

Hyd funds: Pak to pay India £150k legal cost

With Pakistan no longer enjoying state immunity over Hyderabad Funds, India has initiated discussions with the Nizam's heirs to bring back the 35 million pound sterling lying in a UK bank for the past 67 years. The Indian government has been emboldened by the fact that the English high court has not just ruled that Islamabad no longer had immunity over the funds but also, as reports from London said on Sunday , asked Pakistan to pay India a compensation of 150,000 pounds for the legal costs incurred by the latter.

Official sources said “initial discussions“ had taken place over the issue with the Nizam's family , the third claimant to the erstwhile Hyderabad ruler's money which was transferred to the bank account of then Pakistani high commissioner to the UK in 1948.

The Union Cabinet in 2008 had passed a resolution authorizing the government to pursue an out of court settlement with Pakistan and the Nizam's family for the money seen by India as its “sacred inheritance. The fact that Pakistan had sovereign immunity over the money , bestowed on it by the House of Lords in 1957, made it impossible for India to achieve this. The government believes that a window has now opened to take control of the money as the English High Court has ruled that Pakistan did not have immunity anymore as it had itself taken legal recourse to settle the issue of ownership once and for all.

Faced with Pakistan's at tempt to recover the Hyderabad Funds through a suo motu legal effort in 2013, India had no choice but to join the proceedings. Realizing later that it could lose its sovereign immunity because of the legal claim it had made to recover the full amount, Pakistan sought to discontinue from the proceedings but this plea was set aside by the court. The court, in fact, asked Pakistan to pay the legal costs incurred by the National Westminster Bank, which holds the money , India and the two grandsons of the Nizam who had opposed the Pakistani plea to abruptly discontinue the proceedings.

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