We all know the hard fact: neither wealth nor income is ever uniform for
us all. Justified or not, they are unevenly distributed; few are rich
and many are poor! Investigations for more than hundred years and the
recent availability of the income distribution data in the internet
(made available by the finance ministries of various countries; from the
tax return data of the income tax departments) have revealed some
remarkable features. Irrespective of many differences in culture,
history, language and, to some extent, the economic policies followed in
different countries, the income distribution is seen to fol- low a
particular universal pattern. So does the wealth distribution. Barring
an initial rise in population with income (or wealth; for the
destitutes), the population decreases either exponentially or in a
log-normal way for the ma- jority of 'middle income' group, and it
eventually decreases following a power law (Pareto law, following
Vilfredo Pareto's observation in 1896) for the rich- est 5-10 % of the
population! This seems to be an universal feature - valid for most of
the countries and civilizations; may be in ancient Egypt as well!
Econophysicists tried to view this as a natural law for a statistical
ma- body-dynamical market system, analogous to gases, liquids or solids:
classical or quantum.