New Delhi, March 9 -- You walk into a store selling personal care products and pick up two nearly identical products -one labelled for men, the other for women. To your surprise, the women's version costs more. This invisible yet pervasive price disparity, known as the 'pink tax', quietly drains women's wallets on everything from personal care items to professional services like dry cleaning and healthcare.

Now, layering that with income tax, the financial gap widens even further, leaving women with less disposable income than their male counterparts. This isn't just an unfair coincidence, it's a systemic issue that deepens financial inequality.

Let's move beyond symbolic gestures and confront this dual economic burden through meaningfu...