The Great Pay Divide, Should India Cap CEO Salaries to Save Jobs?
Introduction
The recent layoff of 12,000 employees by Tata Consultancy Services (TCS)—India’s fourth-largest employer—has reignited a fiery debate: Should there be a legal ceiling on the salaries of top executives to reduce income inequality and prevent mass job cuts?
This controversy comes at a critical juncture:
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AI and automation are displacing mid-level IT professionals.
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CEO-to-worker pay ratios in Indian IT firms range from 1:325 (TCS) to 1:600 (Wipro)—up from 1:40 in the 1970s.
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Political push: The All India Professional Congress (AIPC) is advocating for government intervention to cap executive pay.
This article examines:
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The growing pay gap crisis in corporate India
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Arguments for and against salary caps
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Global precedents (sports leagues, European policies)
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Policy solutions to balance equity and meritocracy
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A 5-point roadmap for fairer wage structures
Why in News?
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TCS laid off 12,000 senior employees (March 2025), citing “obsolete skills” due to AI.
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AIPC demands pay ratio caps:
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CEO salary ≤ 50x median employee pay (vs. current 300–600x).
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Global context:
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U.S. CEO pay = 344x worker avg. (Economic Policy Institute).
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UK, Germany mandate pay ratio disclosures (no caps yet).
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Key Issues and Analysis
1. The Stark Reality: India’s CEO-Worker Pay Gap
| Company | CEO Pay Ratio (vs. Median Employee) | Annual CEO Compensation |
|---|---|---|
| TCS | 1:325 | ₹120–150 crore |
| Wipro | 1:600 | ₹200+ crore |
| Infosys | 1:400 | ₹90–110 crore |
Historical Shift:
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1960s–70s: Ratios were 1:40 to 1:50.
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2020s: Skyrocketed due to stock options, global benchmarking.
2. The Layoff Paradox: High Profits, Mass Job Cuts
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TCS Q4 2025: ₹12,000 crore profit (+18% YoY) but 12,000 layoffs.
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Reason cited: “Skill redundancy”—yet top management bonuses rose 25%.
AIPC’s Argument:
“If salaries at the top were capped, firms could retain more employees.”
Corporate Counterargument:
“Pay cuts will drive talent to foreign firms, hurting competitiveness.”
3. Global Precedents: What Works?
A. Sports Leagues (Pro-Cap)
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NBA (Basketball): Soft salary cap = $136M/team (2024).
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English Premier League (Football): £105M wage cap/season.
Result: Competitive balance + profitability maintained.
B. Corporate World (Mixed Results)
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Switzerland: 2013 referendum rejected 1:12 pay cap.
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Germany: Mandates disclosure but no caps.
Lesson: Transparency first, caps as last resort.
4. Policy Dilemmas: Can Government Intervene?
A. Legal Hurdles
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Labour is a State Subject: Requires central-state coordination.
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SEBI’s Role: Could mandate pay ratio disclosures for listed firms.
B. Economic Risks
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Brain drain: Top execs may flee to U.S./Singapore.
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Investor backlash: Perceived as “anti-business.”
5-Point Roadmap for Fairer Pay
1. Mandatory Pay Ratio Disclosure
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SEBI rule: All NSE/BSE firms must publish CEO-worker pay gaps.
2. Tax Disincentives for Extreme Gaps
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Firms with ratios >1:100 pay higher corporate taxes.
3. Worker Representation on Boards
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Germany model: 50% board seats for employees in large firms.
4. “Robot Tax” for AI-Led Layoffs
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Tax firms replacing humans with AI; fund reskilling programs.
5. Strengthen Collective Bargaining
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IT employee unions to negotiate fairer wage structures.
Conclusion: Equity vs. Efficiency—Finding the Balance
The TCS layoffs expose a broken social contract—one where executives profit while workers bear automation’s brunt. While hard caps may be impractical, India needs:
✔ Transparency (disclose pay ratios).
✔ Accountability (tax firms with extreme gaps).
✔ Worker empowerment (board seats, unions).
As Praveen Chakravarty (AIPC) notes:
“This isn’t about equality—it’s about ending obscene excess while saving jobs.”
The choice isn’t between meritocracy and equity—but between unchecked greed and inclusive growth.
5 Key Questions & Answers
Q1: How does India’s pay gap compare globally?
A1: Worse than U.S. (1:344), similar to UK (1:109), better than U.S. private equity (1:1000+).
Q2: Would caps hurt India’s IT competitiveness?
A2: Risk exists, but disclosure/tax policies could nudge firms without mandates.
Q3: What’s the “robot tax”?
A3: Tax on firms automating jobs, used to fund unemployment benefits/reskilling.
Q4: Can States enforce pay caps?
A4: Yes, but patchy—needs central framework for uniformity.
Q5: What’s the #1 reform needed?
A5: SEBI-mandated pay ratio disclosures to shame extreme gaps.
