London: UK Chancellor of the Exchequer Rishi Sunak and his wife Akshata Murty made their debut in the annual Sunday Times Rich List' on Friday, ranked 222 with their combined fortune estimated at GBP 730 million in a tally topped by Indian-origin Hinduja brothers with an estimated GBP 28.472 billion. British-born Sunak, who is married to India-born Murty the daughter of Infosys co-founder N R Narayana Murthy, is described in the analysis as the first frontline politician to appear in its annual rankings of the UK's wealthiest in its 34-year history.
The 42-year-old Indian-origin finance minister is a former hedge fund manager who left his financial career to be elected a Conservative Party member of Parliament in 2015. Not so long ago Sunak, 42, was touted as a future Prime Minister, a smooth heir to the bumbling Boris Johnson. However, the Chancellor's ambitions have been derailed by last month's revelation that his wife, Akshata Murty, was a non-dom, a status that allows those who have their permanent home (domicile) outside the UK to pay tax only on earnings in this country, as well as an annual charge of GBP 30,000, reads The Sunday Times Rich List' report.
For Murty, it notes that the entrepreneur owns 0.93 per cent of Infosys in her own name, which would be a stake worth about GBP 690 million. It should have delivered about GBP 54 million in dividends over the past seven and a half years including GBP 11 million in 2021. Without the non-dom status Murty would have been liable for GBP 20.6 million of UK tax on these payments. She has now agreed to pay tax on her 2021 dividends, the report adds.
Last month, Murty had announced that she will pay UK taxes on all her income, including from India, to avoid the row over her non-dom status being a distraction for her husband. Sunak had vehemently defended his wife and has since been given a clean chit by an independent ministerial ethics advisor to the UK government over the issue.
Meanwhile, Sri and Gopichand Hinduja and family returned to the top of the 'Sunday Times Rich List' rankings after slipping to third place last year, with the biggest fortune recorded in the list's history. All may not be harmonious within the Hinduja dynasty, but their business empire has enjoyed a bumper year, notes the newspaper, with reference to a reported family feud.