Adhyāya 6: Pañca-mahābhūta–guṇa-nirdeśa and Sudarśana-dvīpa
Five Elements, Sensory Qualities, and a Cosmographic Island
तस्मात् कुबेरो भगवांश्षतुर्थ भागमश्चुते ततः कलांशं वित्तस्य मनुष्येभ्य: प्रयच्छति,भगवान् कुबेर उन्हींसे धनका चतुर्थ भाग प्राप्त करके उसका उपभोग करते हैं और उस धनका सोलहवाँ भाग मनुष्योंको देते हैं
tasmāt kuberaḥ bhagavāṁś caturtha-bhāgam acyute tataḥ kalāṁśaṁ vittasya manuṣyebhyaḥ prayacchati |
پس بھگوان کُبیر اَچْیُت سے دولت کا چوتھا حصہ پا کر اسے برتتا ہے؛ اور اسی دولت میں سے ایک حصہ انسانوں کو عطا کرتا ہے۔
संजय उवाच
Wealth is portrayed as flowing through a divinely ordered chain of stewardship: Kubera receives a sanctioned share from Acyuta and, rather than hoarding it, distributes a portion to humans. The ethical implication is that prosperity carries an obligation of rightful enjoyment and responsible giving, not absolute private ownership.
Sañjaya describes a cosmological-economic arrangement: Kubera, the deity associated with treasure, receives a defined portion (a fourth share) from Acyuta and then allocates a smaller portion of that wealth to human beings. The statement functions as an explanatory aside about how human access to wealth is mediated and regulated.