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Capital in the Twenty First Century

Capital in the Twenty First Century

byThomas Piketty
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A. J. Sutter
5.0 out of 5 starsAn important book (in both the English and French senses of the word)
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on March 17, 2014
This is a monumental work about inequality. Despite the title's allusion to Marx's classic (a point emphasized by the dust jacket design), it's neither a primarily theoretical nor a primarily polemical work, though it has elements of both theory and advocacy. Nor is its author (TP) a radical: he taught at MIT, and is thoroughly at home in the concepts and categories of mainstream neoclassical theory. Nonetheless, I think even many who hold less orthodox views about economics will find this book stimulating, valuable and sympathetic in many respects. And all readers ought to find it disturbing.

In the ultra-long comments below, I begin with the book's audience and style (§ 1); then turn to some of the book's main arguments, which are more nuanced than usually reported (§§ 2-6); then to some things that are unclear or missing (§§ 7-8); and I end with some comments about the book's production (§ 9) and some concluding remarks.

1. In the original French edition, TP says that he intended this book to be readable for persons without any particular technical knowledge. In principle, it could be read by a broad, college-educated audience. TP's prose is very clear and direct, with a low density of jargon and a high density of information. (I read the French edition, but Arthur Goldhammer's translation seems to preserve these qualities very well.) The discussion is enlivened by well-chosen references to literature and a sprinkling of sarcastic barbs, both of them techniques that French scholars have developed into art forms (if not as elegant as John Kenneth Galbraith's irony). The allusions here range from Balzac, Jane Austen and Orhan Pamuk to "The Aristocats," "Bones" and "Dirty Sexy Money;" and the sarcasm hits both university economists and The Economist (@636n20), among others.

But: this is a long and demanding book. It talks relatively little about current events or the policies of particular governments, unlike, say, Joseph Stiglitz's "The Price of Inequality" (2012). I wouldn't say Stiglitz's is an easy book, but it was written more with of a popular audience in mind (picking up 270+ Amazon reviews in less than 2 years). TP's presentation is far more methodical and meticulous than Stiglitz's. It helps for the reader to be interested in the fine points of data series and categories, and in the sources of uncertainty in data. Occasionally the discussion will focus on concepts from academic economics, such as Cobb-Douglas production functions, elasticities, and Pareto coefficients; while TP uses words rather than math on these occasions, he generally assumes you pretty much know what he's talking about. Finally, if, as I did, you make it through the whole thing while reading with some attention, I bet dollars to donuts you'll come out of the experience feeling very, very down, on account of TP's message. Actually, that mood will hit you long before the end. Despite its felicities of style, this is an arduous read.

2. The "capital" in the title includes not only farms, factories, equipment and other means of production, but also assets typically owned by individuals, such as real property, stocks and other financial instruments, gold, antiques, etc. -- what's sometimes called "wealth". TP excludes so-called "human capital," because it lacks some features of true capital (ability to be traded in a market, inclusion in national accounts as investment), unless it's in the form of slaves.

The distribution of capital is far more unequal than that of income. Even the Scandinavian countries have a Gini coefficient for capital of 0.58 -- comparable to that for income inequality in Angola and Haiti, among the 10 worst in the world (World Bank figures). For Europe and the US in 2010, the coefficient is at 0.67 and 0.73 respectively, worse than any country on the World Bank income inequality chart. (Of course, the worst countries on that World Bank list have hair-raising capital inequality, too.)

The book's main thesis is that economic growth alone isn't sufficient to overcome three "divergence mechanisms" or "forces" that are in many places returning inequality in income and/or capital to pre-World War I levels. The main mechanisms are:

(A) the historical tendency of capital to earn returns at a higher rate ('r') than the growth rate of national income ('g'), which typically sets a constraint on how workers' salaries grow, symbolized by the mathematical expression, "r > g".
(B) the relatively recent (post-1980) widening spread between salaries, not only between the wealthiest 10% or 1% and the mean, but even within the top 1%.
(C) an even newer inequality in financial returns, which correlates r with the initial size of an investment portfolio -- i.e., different r for different investors.

A point to keep in mind is that g relates to national income, not to GDP. National income = GDP - depreciation of capital + net revenue received from overseas. Among other benefits, this measure corrects for the reconstruction boosts in GDP after wars, hurricanes, earthquakes, etc., since the depreciation term takes the destruction of property into account. Also, an increase in national income usually has two different sources: part of it is truly economic, coming from productivity growth (output per worker), and part is due to population growth. Historically, it's the latter that has dominated.

3. The r > g argument has received the most attention. It's to be seen "as an historical reality dependent on a variety of mechanisms not as an absolute logical necessity" (@361). TP finds that this condition has held throughout most of the past 2,000 years. As long as it does, he says, it's the natural tendency of capitalism to make inequality worse -- and the bigger the difference (r - g), the worse that inequality will be. Many commentators about this book make it sound as if this is an obvious mechanism. But if you play with it on Excel, using reasonable values for r and g, it turns out to be slower and more sensitive to initial conditions than you might expect.

Here's a toy example: Let's suppose r = 4%, g = 1.5%, and that salaries rise as fast as g (a very idealistic assumption!); and let's assume these rates are net of taxes or that no taxes apply. I'll compare the situations of three people in Silicon Valley: X, an engineer who made $8.5 million by exercising stock options when the company she used to work for had an IPO; Y, the same company's former HR manager, who made $6.0 million from her options; and Z, a young lawyer at a local law firm, who has a $200,000 salary when we first meet her.

After a year, X has $340K in disposable income, Y has $240K, and Z gets a raise to $203K. Suppose X and Y spend all their income from their capital every year. Eventually, Z can earn more than each of them: it will take her about 37 years to exceed X's annual income, but only 13 years to make more than Y. Now suppose X and Y each save the equivalent of 1.5% of their capital. Then Z will never overtake either one in gross annual revenue, but the situation as to disposable cash is a bit different. After saving, X will always have more cash to play with than Z, but it will take more than 15 years for her to have just 50% more than Z does. As for Y, she'll actually start out with less annual cash than Z, and it will take her 13 or 14 years just to catch up -- even though she's a multi-millionaire.

The true potency of the r > g mechanism comes from its working in conjunction with other circumstances. For example, according to TP's historical data, I've been way too conservative in my assumptions about X's and Y's advantages over Z.

From the 18th through the early 20th Centuries, the people who earned money from capital had proportionally a lot more than they do today: e.g., in 1910, the wealthiest 1% in Europe held > 60% of all European wealth, about triple the share they hold today (see Fig. 10.6). The US was not so extreme, but still very unequal: From 1810 to 1910, the share of the top 1% grew from 25% of American wealth to 45.1% (Fig. 10.5), compared to 33.8% today. So to set our example 100-200 years ago, the endowments of X and Y could plausibly be much bigger relative to Z's wages (especially if we chose, say, Wilhelmine Germany instead of Silicon Valley).

More recently, since the 1980s, most folks with a lot of capital also earn salaries -- and having a lot of capital tends to be correlated with having a salary well above average. So in a more realistic modern example, we should consider that X and Y have moved on to new companies where they receive hefty salaries, which would give each in total a healthy and growing excess of annual spendable cash versus Z. This is the realm of the second divergence mechanism, which is especially formidable in America. In 2010 the richest 1% not only held more than 33% of American wealth, but they earned between 17x and 20x the mean American income (depending on whether capital gains are included). Even the wealthiest 0.1% of Americans work, for average incomes roughly 75x the mean (or 95x, if capital gains are included) (see Table S8.2). At the other end of the spectrum, I was shocked to learn that the purchasing power of the US Federal minimum wage peaked in *1969* -- what was $1.60 an hour back then would be worth $10.10 in 2013 dollars. In those same dollars, the current statutory minimum hourly wage is $7.25 or a bit less (see Fig. 9.1 and nearby text).

On top of these trends, succession to family wealth is becoming important again today, even if not to the full degree it was in 19th Century novels. TP frames this in terms of the dialogue of the worldly Vautrin and the young, ambitious Rastignac in Balzac's "Père Goriot" (1853). Rastignac aspires to wealth by studying law. Vautrin counsels him that unless he can claw his way to become one of the five richest lawyers in Paris, his path will be easier if he simply marries an heiress in lieu of study. Cut to the present: judging by TP's Fig. 11.10, law school might have been the better choice for Baby Boomers, but if you're a Rastignac in your 20s or 30s when you read this, consider marrying up. Maybe you think you'd rather found the next Facebook or Google -- but why work so hard, and against such long odds? TP shows that when Steve Jobs died in 2011, his $8 billion fortune was only 1/3rd that of French heiress Liliane Bettencourt, who has never worked a day in her life.

4. There's another way that "r > g" is inadequate as a summary of TP's argument: TP calculates that during the past century (1913-2012), we've seen r < g, the opposite of its usual polarity (Chapter 10).

High rates of growth -- or at least, what we're accustomed to thinking of as high rates of growth, 3%-4% or more -- aren't a sufficient explanation. In fact, such rates of growth aren't sustainable in the long term, and were not sustained in most countries; they're mainly a catch-up mechanism lasting a few decades, according to TP. During the period from 1970-2010, the actual per capita growth rate of national income averaged about 1.8% for the US and Germany, 1.9% for the UK, and 1.6%-1.7% for France, Italy, Canada and Australia. The wealthy country with the highest per capita rate was Japan, at 2.0 (Table 5.1). (Think about that, next time you're tempted to swallow what Paul Krugman and other pundits pronounce.) Nonetheless, growth rates in this range appear to be what TP calls "weak" (e.g., @23).

Rather, the main reasons for the flip are the tremendous destruction of capital in Europe due to the two world wars, and the imposition of very substantial taxes on capital, at an average rate of about 30% in recent years. These greatly reduced r.

Despite these trends, inequality has been getting worse during the past few decades. This isn't a paradox, but rather the impact of the other divergence mechanisms, especially the rise of the "working rich" and the spread of inequality in salaries. So we should be quite alarmed by TP's assertion that we'll flip back to r > g during the 21st Century. His explanations for this seem rather more speculative than most of the rest of the book, though it's clear he expects g to remain low. I return to this a bit more in § 7 below.

In any case, it's clear that r > g isn't a necessary condition for inequality to get worse.

5. TP reserves his most anxious prose ("radical divergence," "explosive trajectories and uncontrolled inegalitarian spirals") for the third mechanism, inequality in returns from capital (@431, 439). Those with a great deal of capital are able to earn higher returns on it -- such as 6%-7%, or even 10%-11% in the case of billionaires like Bill Gates and Bettencourt -- compared to those with only a few hundred thousand or millions of dollars, who may earn closer to 2%-4%. This results from two types of economies of scale: the ultra-rich can afford more intermediaries and advisers, and they can afford to take on more risk.

Unfortunately, public records don't provide adequate information on this point, and while TP does look at Forbes's and other magazines' lists of the wealthy, those present many methodological issues. So TP corroborates his findings by looking at the more than 800 US universities who report about their endowments. Most spend less than 1%, or even less than 0.5%, of their endowments on annual management fees. Harvard University spent around $100 million annually (ca. 0.3%) on management of its $30 billion endowment, and earned net returns of 10.2% annually during 1980-2010 (not counting an additional 2% annual growth from new gifts). Yale and Princeton, each with a $20 billion endowment, earned a similar rate. A majority of universities have endowments of less than $100 million, and so obviously can't fork over $100 million to managers; they earned average returns of 6.2% during that period (still better on average than you or me).

TP of course doesn't worry that universities will own most of the world, nor does he find it plausible that sovereign funds from Asia or oil-producing countries will either. The bigger danger, he contends, is private oligarchs, and he believes this process is already underway. Since the officially documented ownership of global assets comes up slightly negative, TP calculates that either the rich are already hiding the equivalent of at least 8% of global GDP in tax havens, or else that our planet is owned by Mars (@465-466).

6. In Part IV of the book, TP considers policy approaches to deal with the three forces of divergence. In short, the answer for all three is a progressive, annual global tax on capital, to be set at an internationally agreed rate and its proceeds apportioned among countries according to a negotiated schedule (@515). This will also need a global real-time reporting system for transactions in capital assets. Many will attack these ideas, but it seems that TP's main intention is to get a serious conversation going. His admits his approach is utopian, but maintains that utopian ideas are useful as points of reference.

What interested me most was that TP doesn't see pumping up g as a viable approach to preventing r > g from returning. For one thing, demographics create some limitations in how far g can be pushed, especially in countries whose populations will soon be declining (or Japan, where that's happening already). For another, the same forces that pump up g can also increase r, at least in theory, so (r - g) wouldn't necessarily change much. The more practical answer then, is to bring down r.

In his final chapter TP turns to the very topical question of public debt, which he sees as an issue of wealth distribution and not of absolute wealth. He reminds us about two of its important aspects: One is that public debt takes money from the pockets of the mass of citizens, who pay taxes, and puts it in the pockets of the smaller group of people who are wealthy enough to make loans to the state. The other point is that nations are rich -- it's only states who are strapped for funds. He calculates that in many countries, a one-time progressive capital tax of up to 20% on property portfolios worth more than 1 million Euro could bring the national debt to zero, or nearly so.

Actually, TP doesn't believe that such a drastic reduction in debt levels is urgent, any more than he believes that such a gigantic tax is politically feasible. But his observation puts the lie to the notion that one must raise consumption taxes or income taxes (or, for that matter, experience economic growth) to reduce debt levels.

7. There were a couple of rare instances where I didn't feel the text was sufficiently clear. TP very graciously replied to my emailed inquiries about these matters, but without that input, I'd have remained quite confused by them.

(a) The first arose in Chapter 1, where α (alpha) is defined as designating the "share of income from capital in national income." According to the perhaps intemperately named "first law of capitalism," α = rβ, where β is the ratio of the stock of capital to the flow of national income (and r is as above, the rate of return on capital).

But an important category of income from capital is capital gains, the profits you make when you buy assets cheap and sell them dear. Unrealized capital gains make up a substantial part of the fortunes of Bill Gates, Steve Jobs and other billionaires mentioned in the book. And capital gains are *not* included in national income, according to the algorithm for computing that quantity. (Nor are they included in GDP.) This makes the use of the preposition "in" confusing -- does it mean that capital gains aren't considered as income from capital?

This issue seems to have its root in academic economics, where α appears as a parameter in the neoclassical growth model developed by Robert Solow. The model represents an economy that produces one type of good -- i.e., it's all about making and selling stuff that gets consumed, so capital gains aren't considered. (In a sense, this model supplies a lot of the motivation for Part II of the book: the academic debate over the relative shares of capital and labor in the national income, i.e., the size of α and whether it changes with time, is a long and at times contentious one. But you can still benefit from reading Part II without knowing that.)

The answer I got from TP is that because capital gains don't seem to be very important in the long term (>100 years), netting out to roughly zero over such periods, he didn't consider them when discussing α. The subject of capital gains does come up later in other contexts, though, and TP does consider them important in the short-term (which in some contexts can mean a timescale of several decades).

(b) The second issue relates to TP's prediction that our current condition of r < g will flip back to r > g later this century. TP mentions that for the past 100 years, wartime destruction and, later, an average 30% tax rate on capital have brought r below g, despite currently weak growth rates in many countries. The data in the book, though is rather opaque about the relative contributions of these factors. Also, the book's clearest explanation of why matters might reverse rests on the possibility that countries will compete to attract capital by a race to the bottom in capital tax rates, allowing r to edge back up. This sounded rather too speculative to warrant such definite conviction about the return of r > g.

I checked the online material, and found the Excel file (not the pdf file) of supplementary Table S10.3, which mentions some of TP's assumptions. Among other things, this makes it clear that TP factors in destruction of capital from WWII in calculating r even for the most recent 50 years. It seems plausible that this will be less important going forward, so that even a 30% average tax rate on capital might not be sufficient in and of itself to prevent r from popping above g again ... maybe. I'm still not entirely convinced that TP's argument about the future of r is among the strongest in the book; but I'd be even less so if I hadn't consulted the online information.

8. No book can talk about everything pertinent to its theme, so it's all too easy to think of things one wishes had been included. Still, I was disappointed that the book was conventional both in its thinking about economic growth, and in its thinking less about growth's environmental consequences.

TP tells us that part of "the reality of growth" is that "the material conditions of life have clearly improved dramatically since the Industrial Revolution" (@89). Its main benefits include its roles as a social equalizer, and as a "diversifi[er] of lifestyles" (@ 83, 90). "[A] society that grows at 1 percent a year ... is a society that undergoes deep and permanent change" (@96).

Growth's equalizing effect, though, comes largely from population-based growth, whereas "a stagnant, or worse, decreasing population increases the influence of capital in previous generations" (@84). So is a country already in that condition, such as Japan, supposed to open its doors to immigrants? As an immigrant to Japan myself, I can appreciate that there are many social, cultural and political reasons why this could be a bad path both for country and for many of the immigrants as well. How about focusing on productivity-led growth instead? Maybe, because "in a society where output per capita grows tenfold in a generation, it is better to count on what one can earn and save from one's own labor" (@84), instead of relying on an inheritance. The problem is, this takes for granted that gains from productivity improvements will be shared with labor, rather than shareholders. Yet Part II shows that labor's share has been flat or declining. In Japan, productivity improvements nowadays tend to come from using temporary employees instead of higher-paid permanent ones, and from using robots in lieu of employees at all. These have worked out to be more methods for enhancing inequality, than for abating it.

Both population growth and productivity growth have other costs, too. The rapid growth of output TP alludes to could only be of the transitory, catch-up sort, such as China has been experiencing since the 1980s. The environmental consequences of that haven't exactly been benign. Nor does the book give any consideration to the environmental consequences of population growth, when the population in question aspires to a wealthy country's per capita environmental footprint.

So are countries with declining populations doomed to oligarchy until all the other countries in the world can agree on a global capital tax? Obviously there are better ways to proceed. Such as examining whether growth truly is necessary for further improving health and other material conditions of life, even in an already-wealthy country. And inquiring whether deep and permanent change is a virtue in itself, or whether good sorts of changes can be achieved without following policies obsessed with growth. Exploring such questions thoroughly would certainly have been outside the scope of this book, but failing even to hint at their existence was either a missed opportunity or a lapse of imagination.

9. In addition to the good translation, some other aspects of the book's transition to English succeed. The US hardcover has sewn signatures; my closely-read and much-shlepped French copy, which comes in at nearly 1,000 pages in a perfect binding, is already showing signs of loose leaves. The US edition has a pretty good index, whereas the French lacked one entirely. It's not quite complete, though: e.g., you won't find the above-mentioned references to Mars, "Bones" or The Economist in it, and I noticed a few references to Japan that were missing, too. On the other hand, the notes didn't fare as well. The notes in this book are long, discursive and informative; you really should read them. The French original used footnotes, but Harvard opted for endnotes, which means you'll either be doing a lot of flipping back and forth, or else ignoring a lot of good material.

A mixed blessing in both editions is that the technical appendix has been punted online. The package is generous, and includes files for the book's tables and figures in both pdf and Excel formats. The expository appendix (evidently translated by someone other than Dr. Goldhammer) includes hyperlinks to pertinent scholarly articles. Downloading the 2013 paper TP wrote with Gabriel Zucman, "Capital is Back," along with its own humongous technical appendix, might be a good choice: the present book's technical appendix refers to this often. If you want all relevant Excel files (including, e.g., some UN data and TP's comments to the Angus Maddison historical data), be sure to scroll through the pdf of the appendix and click on appropriate links, since several such items are absent from the website's "Piketty 2014 Excel files" folder.

Unfortunately, no one can know if this website will be maintained a few decades from now, or how easy it will be to read .pdf and .xls files by then. Just as is the case today with books by leading mid-20th Century economists, this is the sort of book that scholars will still want to read in future, even after it's out of print. They'll be very frustrated by the many cross-references to the technical appendix (at least 100-200 times by my eyeball count) if the information has vanished. I hope that in the not-too-distant future TP will freeze and publish a hard copy of this supplemental material for archival purposes.

It's also surprising that not even the website provides a comprehensive bibliography. The technical appendix includes a number of references, but these are spread out over a list at the beginning and more references embedded into a chapter-by-chapter commentary. Even this fragmented resource doesn't pick up many of the books and articles mentioned in the printed book's endnotes/footnotes. Again, I hope TP or the publisher will remedy this soon.

===

Among its other accomplishments, the book demolishes a couple of abstractions from the 1950s that economists have cherished for decades. One is the "Kuznets curve," according to which income inequality first rises, then peaks and thereafter declines as per capita GDP (or earlier, GNP) continues to rise. Another is the Modigliani "life-cycle" saving theory, which posits that the people save for their retirement and then spend pretty much everything by the time they die. TP's long runs of data show that both of these theories were plausible, if ever, at best only during a brief era around the time they were formulated, when both capital and income were distributed in a more egalitarian way.

How will the economists of today react to this book? Paul Krugman didn't provide an encouraging sign in his blog a few days after the US edition appeared. First thing he did was to try to "understand" it by plugging TP's data into another abstract 1950s-era mathematical model. The vast majority of mainstream economists didn't see the 2008 crash coming, but after it happened they insisted that their models weren't defective. If an historical event of that magnitude couldn't make a dent in their worldview, one has to be a great optimist to believe that this book will. More realistic may be to hope that this book's impact can be political. Luckily, that isn't up just to economists, but to readers like us.
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Top critical review

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Paul F. Ross
2.0 out of 5 starsWhy do the wealthy get wealthier ... and what difference does it make?
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on November 1, 2014
Review of Piketty's Capital by Paul F. Ross

Thomas Piketty, French economist associated with the Paris School of Economics, does an interesting study of the sources of wealth for the wealthy - he tracks the top one percent and also the top ten percent in family (household) wealth - in France, Britain, the US, Germany, and other nations when data are available, following events over the last 400 years or as much of that time as history and record
___________________________________________________________________________________

Piketty, Thomas Capital in the twenty-first century 2014, The Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, Cambridge MA, viii + 685 pages
___________________________________________________________________________________

keeping will allow. He describes the share of the entire national wealth in each nation that is owned by these very wealthy families, showing how wealth grew and how it shrank in these four centuries. His account runs to almost 700 pages. Piketty examines the tax rates for incomes and for estates for the wealthiest people in the countries for which he has records. Piketty provides 80 pages of detailed footnotes. He provides an "online technical appendix" at http://piketty.pse.ens.fr/capital21c where the entire content of the appendix is available in French and in English with selected materials available in multiple additional languages. Published in September 2013, the English translation by Arthur Goldhammer was published by the Belknap Press of Harvard University Press in 2014. These historical examinations, according to Piketty, are a new and unique contribution to the economic literature.

Piketty's economic models

Piketty would have us believe that all we need to know to answer the question "Why do the wealthy get wealthier?" is explained by two simple equations ...

(1) á = r x â the first fundamental law of capitalism (p 52)

(2) â = s / g the second fundamental law of capitalism (p 166)

As with all equations, you have to know the definitions of the terms. Piketty's work is rooted in the thoughts of economists Malthus, Smith, Ricardo, Say, Engels, Marx, Kuznets, and Solow, Piketty even bowing to the sociologist Talcott Parsons at one point.

The huge disparity in private wealth - the top one percent of the population owning 50 percent of the national wealth, the next 9 percent owning 40 percent, the middle 40 percent owning 5 percent, and the bottom 50 percent owning 5 percent of the national wealth in Europe in 1910 (p 248), ownership in the US in 2010 being distributed as 20, 30, 30, and 20 (p 249) - is caused to increase when ...

(3) r > g the fundamental force for divergence (p 25)

... according to Piketty. Equation (3) says that the distribution of wealth gets more unequal when r, the rate of return on capital, is greater than g, the growth rate ... the growth rate g embracing both changes in productivity and changes in demography (increasing or decreasing populations). It may come as no surprise to the reader that there are other economic forces as well which are described in ...

(4) by = ì x m x â in which by is the annual economic flow of inheritance and
gifts expressed as a proportion of national income (p 383)

Understanding Equation (4) allows the reader to realize the effect of government policy and inheritance taxes on inequality in private wealth as wealth migrates from one generation to the next, interacting with the conditions described by Equation (3) in driving ever increasing divergence in incomes and wealth. In later chapters, Piketty traces the income and estate tax rates in France, Germany, Britain, and the US and shows that executive pay rose sharply, adding to the wealth of the wealthiest, at the time that Britain (under Thatcherism) and the US (under Reaganism) reduced income tax rates from 70 - 80 percent to 30 - 40 percent. The change, according to Piketty, induced executives to campaign more actively for large salary increases and was accompanied by no change at all in productivity increases in the companies and industries and economies led by these ever-more-grandly-paid executives. In short, the increased pay for top executives was economically unjustified.

Piketty shows, very neatly, that progressive taxes on income from work ... intended as social policy to cap unjustified variation in the distribution of wealth ... do not accomplish their on-the-face-of-things purpose since economic gain by the wealthiest individuals comes not from income paid for labor but instead from return on capital (stocks, real estate, business ownership, rents, ...).

Any college-ready high school graduate can easily understand Piketty's high-school-math-level algebraic expressions - after climbing past the fact that Piketty is drawn to Greek letters and the use of italics, features which apparently increase the mystery and self-evident truth of these expressions - and then reading the definitions of each of the symbols (if you can find a single, precise definition of each term). The fondness for Greek letters, in fact the parameters used in Piketty's equations, comes from prior work in economics. With respect to definitions of terms, the term g for growth gets multiple definitions that are scattered across locations in the text separated by hundreds of pages. There is no table of abbreviations for the book. If you happen to remember that g means "growth," that r means rate of return on capital, and that â means capital/income ratio, you can go to the index where, for each of those three terms expressed as words, not symbols, you will find more than a dozen page references through which you can roam in search of definitions!

Piketty writes with the intent to dazzle, perhaps to overwhelm, certainly to convince, not with the intent to communicate with precision.

Life's outcomes have many influences, not just a few

Piketty's four equations name eight variables ... some of them like â , the capital/income ratio in an economy, being at least as much an "outcome," a result following from the presence and size and trends in other variables as it is a "cause" or "input." Piketty, as is the wont of economists, likes to explain vast results using a few, simple ideas (variables) and relationships (equations). The habit showcases the great weaknesses of economics as a scientific discipline, important and useful though economics can be when it steps past its habit of over simplification and its habit of "taking thought" as the only scientific method needed to build useful theory. For example, Keynes' notion that governments are the lender of last resort and must step in to spend, creating work when other organizations are creating too little work as economies turn down, is an idea that has served the US on several occasions although it is an idea yet to be learned in Germany at this very moment.

This reader emerged from a different branch of the behavioral and management sciences, not from economics. Asked to name my sciences, I use terms like "industrial and organizational psychology," "statistics," "psychometrics," even "behavioral and management science." Few have heard of these disciplines. I spent my five-decade career in corporate America's organizations. In a volunteer effort during retirement recently, I addressed a research question - "What influences the price that a patron of the arts is willing to pay when buying a piece of art that is being offered for sale by the artist himself/herself in the first sale of the piece?" - and, within days of beginning the work, had designed data examination for my main sample in which 45 variables were used to describe each transaction (purchase). I then soon added a benchmark sample of observations in which I sought data about 30 similar variables describing the art-buying habits of each of my reporting buyers of art. Those 75 variables, after analysis, shook down to about five important, independent influences on the act of making a purchase of a piece of art. Am I going to admire Piketty's work when his single variable, g (growth), is described on the one hand as an indicator of productivity and, on the other, as an indicator of the growth or decline of the world's human population ... obviously two variables encapsulated as one variable in his equations? Am I going to admire Piketty's work when he believes that g-productivity is related to technological innovation and, at the same time, thinks that the rate of innovation in the future is going to remain "steady as she goes" at the rate experienced over the last four centuries?

Technical weaknesses in Piketty's work

The major weaknesses in Piketty's approach to economic justice are that it is oversimplified and that it won't work. But before we get to those fatal flaws, let's look at some smaller issues.

Piketty is not a competent technician. It has been the practice, since Rene Descartes invented he practce in the 1600s, to draw graphs using two dimensions. The practice works so nicely in a two-dimensional medium ... on paper. Each dimension is specified in units that are announced ... monetary units, say, on the vertical dimension and time in years on the horizontal dimension. One unit is expressed by a chosen distance and that distance remains the same for each successive unit. Exceptions are sometimes adopted as when a dimension is delineated using logarithmic units. The choice in all cases, since Descartes, is to specify the units being used and then stick to using those units for at least the graph in hand. Piketty violates this communication convention. He often chooses to let a unit of distance on his graph represent any variable quantity he wishes ... as in Figure 2.2 (page 80) where he graphs the world's population growth rate. The vertical dimension on the graph is in units of 0.2 percent ... fair enough. Equal horizontal dimensions represent 1000, 500, 200, 120, 90, 40, 20, 20, 20, 20, 20, 20, and 30 years in that order. He continues this irregular practice for six graphs in Chapter 2. In Chapter 3 Piketty uses horizontal equal distances to represent 50, 30, 30, 40, 30, 30, 10, 30, 20, 20, 10, and 10 years respectively in Figure 3.6 (page 126), a practice repeated throughout Chapter 3. He then describes the resulting curves as U curves or Bell curves. Statisticians typically reserve the name "Bell curve" for a graph of the "normal distribution," a shape precisely described by a mathematical expression. Writers often take liberties and apply the name "Bell curve" to curves of roughly similar shape. Piketty uses the phrase "Bell curve" occasionally to describe badly distorted (skewed) curves. Piketty offers no explanation for his distortion of ordinary reporting practices and seems not to know enough to understand that a strongly skewed distribution is not appropriately described as a Bell curve. Following Piketty's practices, one can make a dip in a trend line look like a disastrous crash.

Piketty is not a competent statistician. On page 484, Piketty writes "The most firmly established result in this area of research is that intergenerational reproduction is lowest in the Nordic countries and highest in the United States (with a correlation two thirds higher than in Sweden) ..." Suspecting Piketty of statistical naivete, I followed him to his Footnote 28 for that statement where he confirmed my suspicion. He writes "The correlation coefficient ranges from 0.2 - 0.3 in Sweden and Finland to 0.5 - 0.6 in the United States ..." Correlation coefficients are evaluated and compared after squaring them. Squaring 0.2 for Sweden and 0.5 for the United States yield 0.04 and 0.25 respectively, and 0.25 is six times as high as the Swedish coefficient, not "two thirds higher" as Piketty writes. Economists typically are much better statisticians than Piketty turns out to be.

Piketty cites novelists' descriptions, particularly Jane Austin's and Honore de Balzac's descriptions, of the life of wealthy people in the nineteenth century as a touchstone both for the meaning of and style of life in the upper centile of income/wealth and as a means for conveying the meaning and social acceptance of income/wealth at this level. He seeks to reflect the multiple meanings and social connotations of a term like "rent" instead of defining that term in an economic context and continued use of the term based on his definition. See in particular Piketty's Chapter Eleven where he reviews the meaning of "merit (in the value of one's job performance) and inheritance" as the means for acquiring wealth. In these discussions Piketty reveals particularly his willingness to be a novelist rather than a behavioral scientist. These are value choices with political roots and have no direct connection with "behavioral science" or "science" as empirically based searches for underlying relationships among variables. Piketty seeks to be an engrossing writer, a goal that is important, but loses accuracy in meaning, a characteristic that science values.

Piketty's work is of real service in promoting discussion of the extremes of individual and family wealth by doing his search into the historical records of France, Britain, the US, and other countries. But his evaluation of what he has found does not meet standards of critical thinking or mathematical and statistical standards of reporting and thus risks badly misleading the general publics for which he writes who, themselves, are unprepared to make these evaluations, separating that of value from Piketty's mistakes and pure nonsense.

Piketty's "solution" won't work

Piketty's concerns ... that extremes of individual and family wealth can be extended, are being amplified, by current public policies and economic behavior and that continued or extended extremes in individual and family wealth can lead to political instability ... are well grounded although not very well documented. His solution - install a tax on wealth - won't work.

Piketty is right in his understanding that public policies can be wisely built only if we have information about the activity we seek to understand. He understands correctly that data about wealth and income, even in countries with advanced tax reporting practices, are very incomplete. He hopes banks worldwide will be persuaded - perhaps by the US Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act of 2010 - to share information so that all nations, including the US as the US intends, can trace the wealth of their own citizens anywhere in the world, a capability not now available. Piketty is right in principle but wrong with respect to some important details. How does one identify the owner of a bank account ... by her/his US Social Security Number ... by a universal identification number adopted by all the world's nations and applied retroactively to all those alive now? How does one get all nations to require that their banks comply? The more nations that comply, the greater become the advantages of the banks in the non-complying nations. They become prospective tax havens. Do we have to review the history of why so many US corporations are incorporated in the state of Delaware to understand that local governments have strong reasons to woo wealthy citizens and organizations as local residents? Piketty's hope that there will be universal sharing of information among the banks of the world in the relatively near future is poorly placed. If the nations of the world have no believable information base that can be used to guide the levying of a wealth tax, a wealth tax cannot accomplish its intended policy goals.

Nations do have the option of rationalizing the taxes levied on their own citizens and corporations with respect to income and wealth. Such action with respect to taxes could have a major influence, within a country, decreasing income disparity and increasing justice in the distribution of income/wealth. In that very limited sense, Piketty's tax-based "solution" could have an important impact. Changes in tax policy have had important impacts on the distribution of wealth within individual counties in the twentieth century as Piketty's histories reveal. However, as can be seen anywhere one looks, individual nations find it difficult to muster the political will, whether by democratic means or by autocratic means, to make changes in tax policy in the direction of justice. In democracies, not even college graduates know enough to understand the issues and vote intelligently on the matter. Persuasive messages delivered by mass media under the guidance of well-funded interests win many votes supporting past solutions ... the way things were. In autocracies, government leaders often have many reasons for preserving the power and wealth accumulated in the past. Piketty's solution won't be adopted in the foreseeable future.

An approach to economic justice that can work

I'm a scientist who observes, measures, and seeks to guide improvements in organizational productivity ... a scientist who recognizes that Company A is vital and constantly reinventing itself for survival and growth whereas Company B is moribund and about to fail. I'm a psychologist who recognizes that society today fails to perceive accurately the many qualities of performance at work accomplished by individuals or teams, rewarding outstanding work and assigning new work based upon the quality and features of past performance. I have many friends in management who declare "We try and we succeed," but they're wrong when judged by the standards that my sciences have developed and demonstrated. I'm deeply convinced that recognizing and rewarding outstanding performance will allow societies - drawing these examples of poor performance solely from recent US history in the private economic sector - to avoid failures like Enron, Worldcom, Lehman Brothers, AIG, Bear Stearns, Washington Mutual, Madoff investments, and General Motors, escaping the huge costs of those and many other similar mistakes. I'm deeply convinced, and have evidence supporting my convictions, that recognizing and rewarding outstanding performance at work can quadruple the per capita world's GDP in a few decades and provide resources about which we dare not now dream that can be used to change how we live and treat each other, worldwide.

Pinker (2011) has charted how humanity has decreased the rate at which it behaves violently against fellow humans across a human history covering tens of thousands of years. Humans do learn and transmit what they know to successive generations through a process we can call acculturation. But the learning process need not take tens of thousands of years!

My sciences know how to measure individual and organizational performance as it varies from month to month, year to year. Using that knowledge, individual organizations could, if they would, allocate rewards and assign responsibilities based on those measurements. The approach I propose - measure job performance within an organization and assign new responsibilities, allocating rewards, based on those measurements - will give organizations competitive advantage through dramatic increases in productivity. We'll all recognize that working effectively brings justly earned rewards! Getting ahead is not simply a matter of politics. In this new order, the dunces of the world don't get rewarded. There are personal rewards that follow from being productive. Other organizations, seeing the success, will adopt similar practices. The practice spreads from organization to organization by competitive pressure, not by the impossible-to-win agreement among the world's governments that Piketty's "solution" of a tax on wealth requires. Having grandly increased productivity by rewarding those who merit reward, giving leadership responsibilities to those who have learned how to lead well and with integrity, the world would quickly become a fairer world, a world with per capita GDP at least four times the current level without having asked anyone to work harder, a world with resources it cannot dream of now, a world that is much more generous and ready to help those who cannot help themselves than is today's world, a world having many fewer excuses to engage in terrorism because of economic injustice.

Piketty is plain wrong in modeling the future as if productivity, g, is destined to carry forward at the rate experienced in the last four centuries! His equation explaining divergence in wealth, the equation saying r > g, may have been true most of the time during the last four centuries, but that fact offers no guarantee that it will be true in the years, decades, and centuries ahead. In fact, my proposal, that working life adopt measures to reward those who perform well and place in leadership roles those who can perform responsibly in those roles, can change our economic performance so that increasing productivity far exceeds the influence of population growth/decay or rate of return on capital investments and transforms economies and people's economic behavior around the world. We already know how job performance measurement should be done and how to make that information available for guiding decisions. Spreading that knowledge and finding the will to make the changes are the hurdles that need to be crossed on the way to real competence and justice in the working world.

Is Piketty's book worth a read?

Yes, one cannot move into the future as a well informed person without having understood Piketty's approach and his historical findings with respect to extreme wealth in Europe and the US. Piketty opens the door to the need to know more ... much more. He's right about the need for much more information upon which to base, and with which to evaluate, public policies. He's right in understanding that extremes in wealth threaten the world's political stability. We can see that sad truth in the news headlines that keep repeating themselves decade after decade.

However few readers will be prepared to separate the value in Piketty's work from its shear nonsense and errors. Wouldn't it be grand if the Wall Street Journal and the Financial Times published this review, if the Belknap Press of Harvard University Press were to publish this review as a part of all future printings of Piketty's book! How else will readers be educated quickly and avoid following Piketty's advice only to find, over decades of time, that it doesn't work?

Bellevue, Washington
2 November 2014

Copyright © 2014 by Paul F. Ross
All rights reserved.

References

Piketty, Thomas Capital in the twenty-first century 2014, The Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, Cambridge MA

Pinker, Steven The better angels of our nature: Why violence has declined 2011, Viking, New York NY
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From the United States

A. J. Sutter
5.0 out of 5 stars An important book (in both the English and French senses of the word)
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on March 17, 2014
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This is a monumental work about inequality. Despite the title's allusion to Marx's classic (a point emphasized by the dust jacket design), it's neither a primarily theoretical nor a primarily polemical work, though it has elements of both theory and advocacy. Nor is its author (TP) a radical: he taught at MIT, and is thoroughly at home in the concepts and categories of mainstream neoclassical theory. Nonetheless, I think even many who hold less orthodox views about economics will find this book stimulating, valuable and sympathetic in many respects. And all readers ought to find it disturbing.

In the ultra-long comments below, I begin with the book's audience and style (§ 1); then turn to some of the book's main arguments, which are more nuanced than usually reported (§§ 2-6); then to some things that are unclear or missing (§§ 7-8); and I end with some comments about the book's production (§ 9) and some concluding remarks.

1. In the original French edition, TP says that he intended this book to be readable for persons without any particular technical knowledge. In principle, it could be read by a broad, college-educated audience. TP's prose is very clear and direct, with a low density of jargon and a high density of information. (I read the French edition, but Arthur Goldhammer's translation seems to preserve these qualities very well.) The discussion is enlivened by well-chosen references to literature and a sprinkling of sarcastic barbs, both of them techniques that French scholars have developed into art forms (if not as elegant as John Kenneth Galbraith's irony). The allusions here range from Balzac, Jane Austen and Orhan Pamuk to "The Aristocats," "Bones" and "Dirty Sexy Money;" and the sarcasm hits both university economists and The Economist (@636n20), among others.

But: this is a long and demanding book. It talks relatively little about current events or the policies of particular governments, unlike, say, Joseph Stiglitz's "The Price of Inequality" (2012). I wouldn't say Stiglitz's is an easy book, but it was written more with of a popular audience in mind (picking up 270+ Amazon reviews in less than 2 years). TP's presentation is far more methodical and meticulous than Stiglitz's. It helps for the reader to be interested in the fine points of data series and categories, and in the sources of uncertainty in data. Occasionally the discussion will focus on concepts from academic economics, such as Cobb-Douglas production functions, elasticities, and Pareto coefficients; while TP uses words rather than math on these occasions, he generally assumes you pretty much know what he's talking about. Finally, if, as I did, you make it through the whole thing while reading with some attention, I bet dollars to donuts you'll come out of the experience feeling very, very down, on account of TP's message. Actually, that mood will hit you long before the end. Despite its felicities of style, this is an arduous read.

2. The "capital" in the title includes not only farms, factories, equipment and other means of production, but also assets typically owned by individuals, such as real property, stocks and other financial instruments, gold, antiques, etc. -- what's sometimes called "wealth". TP excludes so-called "human capital," because it lacks some features of true capital (ability to be traded in a market, inclusion in national accounts as investment), unless it's in the form of slaves.

The distribution of capital is far more unequal than that of income. Even the Scandinavian countries have a Gini coefficient for capital of 0.58 -- comparable to that for income inequality in Angola and Haiti, among the 10 worst in the world (World Bank figures). For Europe and the US in 2010, the coefficient is at 0.67 and 0.73 respectively, worse than any country on the World Bank income inequality chart. (Of course, the worst countries on that World Bank list have hair-raising capital inequality, too.)

The book's main thesis is that economic growth alone isn't sufficient to overcome three "divergence mechanisms" or "forces" that are in many places returning inequality in income and/or capital to pre-World War I levels. The main mechanisms are:

(A) the historical tendency of capital to earn returns at a higher rate ('r') than the growth rate of national income ('g'), which typically sets a constraint on how workers' salaries grow, symbolized by the mathematical expression, "r > g".
(B) the relatively recent (post-1980) widening spread between salaries, not only between the wealthiest 10% or 1% and the mean, but even within the top 1%.
(C) an even newer inequality in financial returns, which correlates r with the initial size of an investment portfolio -- i.e., different r for different investors.

A point to keep in mind is that g relates to national income, not to GDP. National income = GDP - depreciation of capital + net revenue received from overseas. Among other benefits, this measure corrects for the reconstruction boosts in GDP after wars, hurricanes, earthquakes, etc., since the depreciation term takes the destruction of property into account. Also, an increase in national income usually has two different sources: part of it is truly economic, coming from productivity growth (output per worker), and part is due to population growth. Historically, it's the latter that has dominated.

3. The r > g argument has received the most attention. It's to be seen "as an historical reality dependent on a variety of mechanisms not as an absolute logical necessity" (@361). TP finds that this condition has held throughout most of the past 2,000 years. As long as it does, he says, it's the natural tendency of capitalism to make inequality worse -- and the bigger the difference (r - g), the worse that inequality will be. Many commentators about this book make it sound as if this is an obvious mechanism. But if you play with it on Excel, using reasonable values for r and g, it turns out to be slower and more sensitive to initial conditions than you might expect.

Here's a toy example: Let's suppose r = 4%, g = 1.5%, and that salaries rise as fast as g (a very idealistic assumption!); and let's assume these rates are net of taxes or that no taxes apply. I'll compare the situations of three people in Silicon Valley: X, an engineer who made $8.5 million by exercising stock options when the company she used to work for had an IPO; Y, the same company's former HR manager, who made $6.0 million from her options; and Z, a young lawyer at a local law firm, who has a $200,000 salary when we first meet her.

After a year, X has $340K in disposable income, Y has $240K, and Z gets a raise to $203K. Suppose X and Y spend all their income from their capital every year. Eventually, Z can earn more than each of them: it will take her about 37 years to exceed X's annual income, but only 13 years to make more than Y. Now suppose X and Y each save the equivalent of 1.5% of their capital. Then Z will never overtake either one in gross annual revenue, but the situation as to disposable cash is a bit different. After saving, X will always have more cash to play with than Z, but it will take more than 15 years for her to have just 50% more than Z does. As for Y, she'll actually start out with less annual cash than Z, and it will take her 13 or 14 years just to catch up -- even though she's a multi-millionaire.

The true potency of the r > g mechanism comes from its working in conjunction with other circumstances. For example, according to TP's historical data, I've been way too conservative in my assumptions about X's and Y's advantages over Z.

From the 18th through the early 20th Centuries, the people who earned money from capital had proportionally a lot more than they do today: e.g., in 1910, the wealthiest 1% in Europe held > 60% of all European wealth, about triple the share they hold today (see Fig. 10.6). The US was not so extreme, but still very unequal: From 1810 to 1910, the share of the top 1% grew from 25% of American wealth to 45.1% (Fig. 10.5), compared to 33.8% today. So to set our example 100-200 years ago, the endowments of X and Y could plausibly be much bigger relative to Z's wages (especially if we chose, say, Wilhelmine Germany instead of Silicon Valley).

More recently, since the 1980s, most folks with a lot of capital also earn salaries -- and having a lot of capital tends to be correlated with having a salary well above average. So in a more realistic modern example, we should consider that X and Y have moved on to new companies where they receive hefty salaries, which would give each in total a healthy and growing excess of annual spendable cash versus Z. This is the realm of the second divergence mechanism, which is especially formidable in America. In 2010 the richest 1% not only held more than 33% of American wealth, but they earned between 17x and 20x the mean American income (depending on whether capital gains are included). Even the wealthiest 0.1% of Americans work, for average incomes roughly 75x the mean (or 95x, if capital gains are included) (see Table S8.2). At the other end of the spectrum, I was shocked to learn that the purchasing power of the US Federal minimum wage peaked in *1969* -- what was $1.60 an hour back then would be worth $10.10 in 2013 dollars. In those same dollars, the current statutory minimum hourly wage is $7.25 or a bit less (see Fig. 9.1 and nearby text).

On top of these trends, succession to family wealth is becoming important again today, even if not to the full degree it was in 19th Century novels. TP frames this in terms of the dialogue of the worldly Vautrin and the young, ambitious Rastignac in Balzac's "Père Goriot" (1853). Rastignac aspires to wealth by studying law. Vautrin counsels him that unless he can claw his way to become one of the five richest lawyers in Paris, his path will be easier if he simply marries an heiress in lieu of study. Cut to the present: judging by TP's Fig. 11.10, law school might have been the better choice for Baby Boomers, but if you're a Rastignac in your 20s or 30s when you read this, consider marrying up. Maybe you think you'd rather found the next Facebook or Google -- but why work so hard, and against such long odds? TP shows that when Steve Jobs died in 2011, his $8 billion fortune was only 1/3rd that of French heiress Liliane Bettencourt, who has never worked a day in her life.

4. There's another way that "r > g" is inadequate as a summary of TP's argument: TP calculates that during the past century (1913-2012), we've seen r < g, the opposite of its usual polarity (Chapter 10).

High rates of growth -- or at least, what we're accustomed to thinking of as high rates of growth, 3%-4% or more -- aren't a sufficient explanation. In fact, such rates of growth aren't sustainable in the long term, and were not sustained in most countries; they're mainly a catch-up mechanism lasting a few decades, according to TP. During the period from 1970-2010, the actual per capita growth rate of national income averaged about 1.8% for the US and Germany, 1.9% for the UK, and 1.6%-1.7% for France, Italy, Canada and Australia. The wealthy country with the highest per capita rate was Japan, at 2.0 (Table 5.1). (Think about that, next time you're tempted to swallow what Paul Krugman and other pundits pronounce.) Nonetheless, growth rates in this range appear to be what TP calls "weak" (e.g., @23).

Rather, the main reasons for the flip are the tremendous destruction of capital in Europe due to the two world wars, and the imposition of very substantial taxes on capital, at an average rate of about 30% in recent years. These greatly reduced r.

Despite these trends, inequality has been getting worse during the past few decades. This isn't a paradox, but rather the impact of the other divergence mechanisms, especially the rise of the "working rich" and the spread of inequality in salaries. So we should be quite alarmed by TP's assertion that we'll flip back to r > g during the 21st Century. His explanations for this seem rather more speculative than most of the rest of the book, though it's clear he expects g to remain low. I return to this a bit more in § 7 below.

In any case, it's clear that r > g isn't a necessary condition for inequality to get worse.

5. TP reserves his most anxious prose ("radical divergence," "explosive trajectories and uncontrolled inegalitarian spirals") for the third mechanism, inequality in returns from capital (@431, 439). Those with a great deal of capital are able to earn higher returns on it -- such as 6%-7%, or even 10%-11% in the case of billionaires like Bill Gates and Bettencourt -- compared to those with only a few hundred thousand or millions of dollars, who may earn closer to 2%-4%. This results from two types of economies of scale: the ultra-rich can afford more intermediaries and advisers, and they can afford to take on more risk.

Unfortunately, public records don't provide adequate information on this point, and while TP does look at Forbes's and other magazines' lists of the wealthy, those present many methodological issues. So TP corroborates his findings by looking at the more than 800 US universities who report about their endowments. Most spend less than 1%, or even less than 0.5%, of their endowments on annual management fees. Harvard University spent around $100 million annually (ca. 0.3%) on management of its $30 billion endowment, and earned net returns of 10.2% annually during 1980-2010 (not counting an additional 2% annual growth from new gifts). Yale and Princeton, each with a $20 billion endowment, earned a similar rate. A majority of universities have endowments of less than $100 million, and so obviously can't fork over $100 million to managers; they earned average returns of 6.2% during that period (still better on average than you or me).

TP of course doesn't worry that universities will own most of the world, nor does he find it plausible that sovereign funds from Asia or oil-producing countries will either. The bigger danger, he contends, is private oligarchs, and he believes this process is already underway. Since the officially documented ownership of global assets comes up slightly negative, TP calculates that either the rich are already hiding the equivalent of at least 8% of global GDP in tax havens, or else that our planet is owned by Mars (@465-466).

6. In Part IV of the book, TP considers policy approaches to deal with the three forces of divergence. In short, the answer for all three is a progressive, annual global tax on capital, to be set at an internationally agreed rate and its proceeds apportioned among countries according to a negotiated schedule (@515). This will also need a global real-time reporting system for transactions in capital assets. Many will attack these ideas, but it seems that TP's main intention is to get a serious conversation going. His admits his approach is utopian, but maintains that utopian ideas are useful as points of reference.

What interested me most was that TP doesn't see pumping up g as a viable approach to preventing r > g from returning. For one thing, demographics create some limitations in how far g can be pushed, especially in countries whose populations will soon be declining (or Japan, where that's happening already). For another, the same forces that pump up g can also increase r, at least in theory, so (r - g) wouldn't necessarily change much. The more practical answer then, is to bring down r.

In his final chapter TP turns to the very topical question of public debt, which he sees as an issue of wealth distribution and not of absolute wealth. He reminds us about two of its important aspects: One is that public debt takes money from the pockets of the mass of citizens, who pay taxes, and puts it in the pockets of the smaller group of people who are wealthy enough to make loans to the state. The other point is that nations are rich -- it's only states who are strapped for funds. He calculates that in many countries, a one-time progressive capital tax of up to 20% on property portfolios worth more than 1 million Euro could bring the national debt to zero, or nearly so.

Actually, TP doesn't believe that such a drastic reduction in debt levels is urgent, any more than he believes that such a gigantic tax is politically feasible. But his observation puts the lie to the notion that one must raise consumption taxes or income taxes (or, for that matter, experience economic growth) to reduce debt levels.

7. There were a couple of rare instances where I didn't feel the text was sufficiently clear. TP very graciously replied to my emailed inquiries about these matters, but without that input, I'd have remained quite confused by them.

(a) The first arose in Chapter 1, where α (alpha) is defined as designating the "share of income from capital in national income." According to the perhaps intemperately named "first law of capitalism," α = rβ, where β is the ratio of the stock of capital to the flow of national income (and r is as above, the rate of return on capital).

But an important category of income from capital is capital gains, the profits you make when you buy assets cheap and sell them dear. Unrealized capital gains make up a substantial part of the fortunes of Bill Gates, Steve Jobs and other billionaires mentioned in the book. And capital gains are *not* included in national income, according to the algorithm for computing that quantity. (Nor are they included in GDP.) This makes the use of the preposition "in" confusing -- does it mean that capital gains aren't considered as income from capital?

This issue seems to have its root in academic economics, where α appears as a parameter in the neoclassical growth model developed by Robert Solow. The model represents an economy that produces one type of good -- i.e., it's all about making and selling stuff that gets consumed, so capital gains aren't considered. (In a sense, this model supplies a lot of the motivation for Part II of the book: the academic debate over the relative shares of capital and labor in the national income, i.e., the size of α and whether it changes with time, is a long and at times contentious one. But you can still benefit from reading Part II without knowing that.)

The answer I got from TP is that because capital gains don't seem to be very important in the long term (>100 years), netting out to roughly zero over such periods, he didn't consider them when discussing α. The subject of capital gains does come up later in other contexts, though, and TP does consider them important in the short-term (which in some contexts can mean a timescale of several decades).

(b) The second issue relates to TP's prediction that our current condition of r < g will flip back to r > g later this century. TP mentions that for the past 100 years, wartime destruction and, later, an average 30% tax rate on capital have brought r below g, despite currently weak growth rates in many countries. The data in the book, though is rather opaque about the relative contributions of these factors. Also, the book's clearest explanation of why matters might reverse rests on the possibility that countries will compete to attract capital by a race to the bottom in capital tax rates, allowing r to edge back up. This sounded rather too speculative to warrant such definite conviction about the return of r > g.

I checked the online material, and found the Excel file (not the pdf file) of supplementary Table S10.3, which mentions some of TP's assumptions. Among other things, this makes it clear that TP factors in destruction of capital from WWII in calculating r even for the most recent 50 years. It seems plausible that this will be less important going forward, so that even a 30% average tax rate on capital might not be sufficient in and of itself to prevent r from popping above g again ... maybe. I'm still not entirely convinced that TP's argument about the future of r is among the strongest in the book; but I'd be even less so if I hadn't consulted the online information.

8. No book can talk about everything pertinent to its theme, so it's all too easy to think of things one wishes had been included. Still, I was disappointed that the book was conventional both in its thinking about economic growth, and in its thinking less about growth's environmental consequences.

TP tells us that part of "the reality of growth" is that "the material conditions of life have clearly improved dramatically since the Industrial Revolution" (@89). Its main benefits include its roles as a social equalizer, and as a "diversifi[er] of lifestyles" (@ 83, 90). "[A] society that grows at 1 percent a year ... is a society that undergoes deep and permanent change" (@96).

Growth's equalizing effect, though, comes largely from population-based growth, whereas "a stagnant, or worse, decreasing population increases the influence of capital in previous generations" (@84). So is a country already in that condition, such as Japan, supposed to open its doors to immigrants? As an immigrant to Japan myself, I can appreciate that there are many social, cultural and political reasons why this could be a bad path both for country and for many of the immigrants as well. How about focusing on productivity-led growth instead? Maybe, because "in a society where output per capita grows tenfold in a generation, it is better to count on what one can earn and save from one's own labor" (@84), instead of relying on an inheritance. The problem is, this takes for granted that gains from productivity improvements will be shared with labor, rather than shareholders. Yet Part II shows that labor's share has been flat or declining. In Japan, productivity improvements nowadays tend to come from using temporary employees instead of higher-paid permanent ones, and from using robots in lieu of employees at all. These have worked out to be more methods for enhancing inequality, than for abating it.

Both population growth and productivity growth have other costs, too. The rapid growth of output TP alludes to could only be of the transitory, catch-up sort, such as China has been experiencing since the 1980s. The environmental consequences of that haven't exactly been benign. Nor does the book give any consideration to the environmental consequences of population growth, when the population in question aspires to a wealthy country's per capita environmental footprint.

So are countries with declining populations doomed to oligarchy until all the other countries in the world can agree on a global capital tax? Obviously there are better ways to proceed. Such as examining whether growth truly is necessary for further improving health and other material conditions of life, even in an already-wealthy country. And inquiring whether deep and permanent change is a virtue in itself, or whether good sorts of changes can be achieved without following policies obsessed with growth. Exploring such questions thoroughly would certainly have been outside the scope of this book, but failing even to hint at their existence was either a missed opportunity or a lapse of imagination.

9. In addition to the good translation, some other aspects of the book's transition to English succeed. The US hardcover has sewn signatures; my closely-read and much-shlepped French copy, which comes in at nearly 1,000 pages in a perfect binding, is already showing signs of loose leaves. The US edition has a pretty good index, whereas the French lacked one entirely. It's not quite complete, though: e.g., you won't find the above-mentioned references to Mars, "Bones" or The Economist in it, and I noticed a few references to Japan that were missing, too. On the other hand, the notes didn't fare as well. The notes in this book are long, discursive and informative; you really should read them. The French original used footnotes, but Harvard opted for endnotes, which means you'll either be doing a lot of flipping back and forth, or else ignoring a lot of good material.

A mixed blessing in both editions is that the technical appendix has been punted online. The package is generous, and includes files for the book's tables and figures in both pdf and Excel formats. The expository appendix (evidently translated by someone other than Dr. Goldhammer) includes hyperlinks to pertinent scholarly articles. Downloading the 2013 paper TP wrote with Gabriel Zucman, "Capital is Back," along with its own humongous technical appendix, might be a good choice: the present book's technical appendix refers to this often. If you want all relevant Excel files (including, e.g., some UN data and TP's comments to the Angus Maddison historical data), be sure to scroll through the pdf of the appendix and click on appropriate links, since several such items are absent from the website's "Piketty 2014 Excel files" folder.

Unfortunately, no one can know if this website will be maintained a few decades from now, or how easy it will be to read .pdf and .xls files by then. Just as is the case today with books by leading mid-20th Century economists, this is the sort of book that scholars will still want to read in future, even after it's out of print. They'll be very frustrated by the many cross-references to the technical appendix (at least 100-200 times by my eyeball count) if the information has vanished. I hope that in the not-too-distant future TP will freeze and publish a hard copy of this supplemental material for archival purposes.

It's also surprising that not even the website provides a comprehensive bibliography. The technical appendix includes a number of references, but these are spread out over a list at the beginning and more references embedded into a chapter-by-chapter commentary. Even this fragmented resource doesn't pick up many of the books and articles mentioned in the printed book's endnotes/footnotes. Again, I hope TP or the publisher will remedy this soon.

===

Among its other accomplishments, the book demolishes a couple of abstractions from the 1950s that economists have cherished for decades. One is the "Kuznets curve," according to which income inequality first rises, then peaks and thereafter declines as per capita GDP (or earlier, GNP) continues to rise. Another is the Modigliani "life-cycle" saving theory, which posits that the people save for their retirement and then spend pretty much everything by the time they die. TP's long runs of data show that both of these theories were plausible, if ever, at best only during a brief era around the time they were formulated, when both capital and income were distributed in a more egalitarian way.

How will the economists of today react to this book? Paul Krugman didn't provide an encouraging sign in his blog a few days after the US edition appeared. First thing he did was to try to "understand" it by plugging TP's data into another abstract 1950s-era mathematical model. The vast majority of mainstream economists didn't see the 2008 crash coming, but after it happened they insisted that their models weren't defective. If an historical event of that magnitude couldn't make a dent in their worldview, one has to be a great optimist to believe that this book will. More realistic may be to hope that this book's impact can be political. Luckily, that isn't up just to economists, but to readers like us.
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Freh
5.0 out of 5 stars Piketty's book intoduces a large volume of data about global income and wealth for a more rational discussion of inequality
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on August 24, 2017
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In his introduction to this book, Piketty states, “When the rate of return on capital exceeds the rate of growth of output and income, as it did in the nineteenth century and seems quite likely to do again in the twenty-first, capitalism automatically generates arbitrary and unsustainable inequalities that radically undermine the meritocratic values on which democratic societies are based.” He further states that “Intellectual and political debate about the distribution of wealth has long been based on an abundance of prejudice and a paucity of fact.” He then addresses this paucity with the presentation and analysis of the results the project he led to acquire an enormous volume of historical data about global income and wealth.

In the introduction, he briefly reviews the contributions but also the errors of earlier debate without data. These included Malthus’s concern with overpopulation and the need to end all welfare, Ricardo’s principle of scarcity with population and production growing as land becomes increasingly scarce, and Marx’s principle of infinite accumulation with the industrial revolution leading to no limit on the accumulation of capital (which did not consider coming social democracy, technological progress, and how to organize society without private capital). The Kuznets Curve of 1955 introduced data from US tax returns and Kuznets’s own estimates of national income to conclude that inequality increased in the early phase but declined in the later phases of industrialization. Unfortunately, this curve greatly understated the roles of the World Wars and violent economic and political shocks that led to the reduction in inequality between 1914 and 1945 and failed to explain the rising inequality after 1970.

Piketty seeks to contribute “to the debate about the best way to organize society…to achieve a just social order….achieved effectively under rule of law…subject to democratic debate.” He states he has “no interest in denouncing inequality or capitalism per se…as long as they are justified.” He worked briefly in the US and found the work of US economists unconvincing. “There had been no significant effort to collect historical data on the dynamics of inequality since Kuznets, yet the profession continued to churn out purely theoretical results without even knowing (the) facts.” He found that “the discipline of economics has yet to get over its childish passion for mathematics and the purely theoretical and often highly ideological speculation.” Subsequently, he returned to France and set out to collect the missing data.

He gathered data in two main categories: 1) inequality in distribution of income and 2) inequality in the distribution of wealth and the relation of wealth to income. For income, he built the World Top Incomes Database (WTID), which is based on the joint work of some thirty researchers around the world. This data series begins in each country when an income tax was established (usually 1910-1920 but as early as the 1880s in Japan and Germany). For wealth his sources included estate tax returns (usually dating back to the 1920s, but in a few cases as far back as the French Revolution), the relative contributions of inherited wealth and savings, and measures of the total stock of national wealth. In collecting as complete and consistent a set of historical sources as possible, he had two advantages over previous authors—a longer historical perspective (now including data from the 2000s) and advances in computer technology.

Piketty reports two major conclusions from his study. “The first is that one should be wary of any economic determinism in regard to inequalities of wealth and income (that they emerge according to immutable natural laws). The history of the distribution of wealth has always been deeply political and it cannot be reduced to purely economic mechanisms. In particular, the reduction of inequality…between 1910 and 1950 was above all a consequence of war and of policies adopted to cope with the shocks of war.” “The resurgence of inequality after 1980 is due largely to political shifts…especially in regard to taxation and finance. The history of inequality is shaped by the way…actors view what is just…as well as the relative power of those actors.”

The second conclusion is “that the dynamics of wealth distribution reveal powerful mechanisms pushing alternately toward convergence (equality) and divergence (inequality)….There is no natural, spontaneous process to prevent destabilizing ineqalitarian forces from prevailing permanently.” “Over a long period of time, the main force in favor of greater equality (convergence) has been the diffusion of knowledge and skills.” Other proposed forces for greater equality, such as advanced technology creating a need for greater skills or class warfare giving way to less divisive generational warfare as the population ages, appear to be largely illusory.

“No matter how potent a force the diffusion of knowledge and skills may be, it can nevertheless be thwarted and overwhelmed by powerful forces pushing…toward greater inequality (divergence).” With respect to income, the spectacular increase in inequality from labor income, particularly in the US and UK, largely reflects the recent marked separation of the top managers of large firms from the rest of the population, not because of increased productivity, but because they can set their own remuneration. This separation is amplified by marginal tax rates that actually decrease for the highest incomes. Capital income from large fortunes also contributes to income inequality but may be understated due to hidden off-shore accounts and by producing only the relatively small portion of income needed for expenses while the rest remains within the fortune. (Fig. I.1 shows income inequality in the US from 1910 to 2010.)

With respect to wealth, inequality (divergence) is increased when the rate of return on capital significantly exceeds the growth rate of the economy (r > g) as it did until the nineteenth century and is likely to in the twenty-first century. “Under such conditions it is inevitable that inherited wealth will dominate wealth amassed from a lifetime’s labor by a wide margin” and lead to extreme inequality. This increasing inequality of wealth is greatly amplified by structural factors leading to higher rates of increase for the largest fortunes that are no longer related to whatever entrepreneurial activities were at the onset of their origin. (Fig. I.2 shows wealth inequality in Europe from 1870 to 2010.) This analysis also shows a major shift in the main components of wealth from land, slaves (in the US), and colonies (in Europe) to domestic capital and housing.

Historically, the rate of return on capital was 4.5-5% from antiquity to 1913, fell to 1.5% by 1950, and is rising again to 4% or more by 2012 and beyond. During the same period, the global rate of growth was close to zero before the industrial revolution, rose to 1.5% by 1913 and to 3.5% in the mid to late twentieth century (due to catch-up after World War II and in the developing world), and is now falling and projected to be 1-1.5% in the twenty-first century. Thus the unusual fall of the return on capital (r) below growth (g) in the mid twentieth century was associated with a temporary reduction in the rate of increasing inequality. (Fig 10.10 shows a comparison of the return on capital [r] to growth [g] from antiquity to 2100.)

This review barely scratches the surface of the core contribution of this book, which is the enormous volume of data and analysis it provides. The numerical information is presented in a very well developed series of 97 illustrations and 18 tables. This information is used as support for extensive analysis and discussion of the many aspects of historical, present, and likely future inequality that often contradict positions related to ideology and simplistic models. An excellent 22 page overview of “A Social State for the Twenty-First Century” is provided at the beginning of the fourth and final part of the book. This is followed by “Rethinking the Progressive Income Tax,” “The Question of the Public Debt,” the author’s preference for “A Global Tax on Capital,” and finally, the conclusion.

The conclusion reiterates that the principal destabilizing force leading to ever-increasing inequality is a return on capital (r) significantly higher than the rate of growth of income and output (g) for long periods of time. Hence wealth accumulated in the past grows more rapidly than output and wages, and the entrepreneur inevitably tends to become a rentier no longer of use in promoting growth. A progressive annual tax on capital would be the right solution to this problem, although it would require a high level of international cooperation. Piketty objects to the expression “economic science” which implies little to do with the logic of politics or culture in conclusions about inequality. He prefers the expression “political economy” which considers economics as a sub discipline of the social sciences, alongside history, sociology, anthropology, and political science. He insists that economic and political changes are inextricably entwined and must be studied together.

This review is supplemented by a relatively random selection of multiple comments and assertions from the book:

“The nature of capital has changed: it once was mainly land but has become primarily housing plus industrial and financial assets.”

“Capital…is always risk-oriented and entrepreneurial, at least at its inception; yet it always tends to transform itself into rents as it accumulates….”

With respect to global inequality, the industrial revolution led to growth of Europe and America’s share of global output to two to three times their share of population. This share is now rapidly decreasing due to higher growth in developing economies in the “catch-up” phase than in mature economies.

Europe and America’s share of global production of goods and services rose from about 30-35% in 1700 to 70-80% from 1900 to 1980, fell to 50% by 2010, and may go as low as 20-30% later in the twenty-first century.

European and American national inequality rose to record heights in 1910, decreased markedly by the 1940s due to the world wars and Great Depression, then began a rapid return to high levels after the 1970s, particularly in the US.

The share of national income for the top 10% in Europe was over 45% in 1910, under 25% in 1970, and about 30% in 2010. In the US it was over 40% in 1910, under 30% in 1970, and nearly 50% in 2010.

“Numerous studies mention a significant increase in the share of national income in the rich countries going to profits and capital after 1970, along with the concomitant decrease in the share going to wages and labor.”

In the past several decades, the share of national income for the top 0.1% increased from 2 to 10% in the US, from 1.5 to 2.5% in France and Japan, and from 1 to 2% in Sweden.

“It is important to note the considerable transfer of US national income—on the order of 15 points—from the poorest 90% to the richest 10% since 1980”— 5 to 7 times greater than the 2 to 3 points in Europe and Japan.

“The vast majority (60 to 70%)…of the top 0.1% of the income hierarchy in 2000-2010 consists of top managers. By comparison, athletes, actors, and artists of all kinds make up less than 5% of this group.”

“At the very highest levels salaries are set by the executives themselves or by corporate compensation committees whose members usually earn comparable salaries….”

“It is when sales and profits increase for external reasons that executive pay rises most rapidly. This is particularly clear in the case of US corporations…pay for luck.”

Global inequality of wealth in the early 2010s is comparable to that of Europe in 1900-1919. The top 0.1% own nearly 20%, the top 1% about 50%, the top 10% between 80 and 90%, and the bottom half less than 5%.

The share of national wealth ownership in Europe for the top 10% and top 1% was 90% and over 50% in 1910, 60% and 20% in 1970, and about 63% and 24% in 2010. During this time, the share for the 50th to the 90th percentile increased from 5% to 40%, creating a middle class, but the share for the bottom 50% remained at 5%.

In the US, shares for the top 10% and top 1% were about 80% and 45% in 1910, 64% and 30% in 1970, and about 70% and 34% in 2010—with a much more rapid increase after 1970 than in Europe, reaching 70% and 34% versus 63% and 24% by 2010 (while the bottom half claim just 2%).

Inherited wealth is estimated to account for 60-70% of the largest fortunes worldwide. This figure is lower than the 80-90% reached during the belle Epoque, but trending strongly toward a return to that level.

Forbes magazine divides billionaires into three groups—pure heirs, heirs who subsequently grow their wealth, and pure entrepreneurs, with each of these groups representing about a third of the total.

Due to increased life expectancy, the average age of heirs at the age of inheritance has increased from thirty in the nineteenth century to fifty in the twenty-first century, although with larger inheritances.

Today, transmission of capital by gift is nearly as important as transmission by inheritance. This change counters increased life expectancy and accounts for almost half of the present inheritance flows.

“No matter how justified inequalities of wealth may be initially, fortunes can grow and perpetuate themselves beyond all reasonable limits and beyond any possible rational justification in terms of social utility.”

Large fortunes experience increasing rates of growth related to size alone independent of their origins—
10% from $15-30 billion, about 9% from $1-15 billion, about 8% from$500 million to $1 billion, about 7% from $100-500 million, and about 6% below $100 million for university endowments.

From 1990 to 2010, the fortune of Bill Gates, the Microsoft genius, grew from $4 billion to $50 billion, while that of Liliane Bettencourt, a cosmetics heiress who never worked a day in her life, grew at a similar rate from $2 billion to $25 billion.

In 2013, sovereign wealth funds were worth $5.3 trillion ($3.2 trillion from petroleum exporting states and 2.1 trillion from nonpetroleum states like China, Hong Kong, and Singapore), similar to the total of $5.4 trillion for Forbes billionaires. Together, these sources account for 3% of global wealth.

Large amounts of unreported financial assets are held in tax havens—approximately 10% according to the negative global balance of payments (more money leaves countries than enters them).

In the US, parents’ income has become an almost perfect predictor of university access—average income of parents of Harvard students is currently about $450,000.

“Broadly speaking, the US and British policies of economic liberalization (after 1980)…neither increased growth nor decreased it.”

The US economy was much more innovative in 1950-1970 than in 1990-2010….Productivity growth was nearly twice as high in the former period as in the latter.

In most countries taxes have (or will soon) become regressive at the top of the income hierarchy.”

The optimal tax rate in the developed countries is probably above 80%.

One of the most important reforms (is) to establish a unified retirement scheme based on individual accounts with equal rights for everyone, no matter how complex one’s career path.

Debt often becomes a backhanded form of redistribution of wealth from the poor to the rich (who as a general rule ought to be paying taxes rather than lending).

Inflation is at best a very imperfect substitute for a progressive tax on capital. It is hard to control, and much of the desired effect disappears once it becomes embedded in expectations.

Defining the meaning of inequality and justifying the position of the winners is a matter of vital importance, and one can expect to see all sorts of misrepresentations of the facts in service of the cause.

No hypocrisy is too great when economic and financial elites are obliged to defend their interests—and that includes economists, who currently occupy an enviable place the US income hierarchy.

“Modern meritocratic society, especially in the United States, is much harder on the losers, because it seeks to justify domination on the grounds of justice, virtue, and merit, to say nothing of the insufficient productivity of those at the bottom.”

The history of the progressive tax over the course of the twentieth century suggests that the risk of a drift toward oligarchy is real and gives little reason for optimism about where the United States is headed.
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Paul F. Ross
2.0 out of 5 stars Why do the wealthy get wealthier ... and what difference does it make?
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on November 1, 2014
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Review of Piketty's Capital by Paul F. Ross

Thomas Piketty, French economist associated with the Paris School of Economics, does an interesting study of the sources of wealth for the wealthy - he tracks the top one percent and also the top ten percent in family (household) wealth - in France, Britain, the US, Germany, and other nations when data are available, following events over the last 400 years or as much of that time as history and record
___________________________________________________________________________________

Piketty, Thomas Capital in the twenty-first century 2014, The Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, Cambridge MA, viii + 685 pages
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keeping will allow. He describes the share of the entire national wealth in each nation that is owned by these very wealthy families, showing how wealth grew and how it shrank in these four centuries. His account runs to almost 700 pages. Piketty examines the tax rates for incomes and for estates for the wealthiest people in the countries for which he has records. Piketty provides 80 pages of detailed footnotes. He provides an "online technical appendix" at http://piketty.pse.ens.fr/capital21c where the entire content of the appendix is available in French and in English with selected materials available in multiple additional languages. Published in September 2013, the English translation by Arthur Goldhammer was published by the Belknap Press of Harvard University Press in 2014. These historical examinations, according to Piketty, are a new and unique contribution to the economic literature.

Piketty's economic models

Piketty would have us believe that all we need to know to answer the question "Why do the wealthy get wealthier?" is explained by two simple equations ...

(1) á = r x â the first fundamental law of capitalism (p 52)

(2) â = s / g the second fundamental law of capitalism (p 166)

As with all equations, you have to know the definitions of the terms. Piketty's work is rooted in the thoughts of economists Malthus, Smith, Ricardo, Say, Engels, Marx, Kuznets, and Solow, Piketty even bowing to the sociologist Talcott Parsons at one point.

The huge disparity in private wealth - the top one percent of the population owning 50 percent of the national wealth, the next 9 percent owning 40 percent, the middle 40 percent owning 5 percent, and the bottom 50 percent owning 5 percent of the national wealth in Europe in 1910 (p 248), ownership in the US in 2010 being distributed as 20, 30, 30, and 20 (p 249) - is caused to increase when ...

(3) r > g the fundamental force for divergence (p 25)

... according to Piketty. Equation (3) says that the distribution of wealth gets more unequal when r, the rate of return on capital, is greater than g, the growth rate ... the growth rate g embracing both changes in productivity and changes in demography (increasing or decreasing populations). It may come as no surprise to the reader that there are other economic forces as well which are described in ...

(4) by = ì x m x â in which by is the annual economic flow of inheritance and
gifts expressed as a proportion of national income (p 383)

Understanding Equation (4) allows the reader to realize the effect of government policy and inheritance taxes on inequality in private wealth as wealth migrates from one generation to the next, interacting with the conditions described by Equation (3) in driving ever increasing divergence in incomes and wealth. In later chapters, Piketty traces the income and estate tax rates in France, Germany, Britain, and the US and shows that executive pay rose sharply, adding to the wealth of the wealthiest, at the time that Britain (under Thatcherism) and the US (under Reaganism) reduced income tax rates from 70 - 80 percent to 30 - 40 percent. The change, according to Piketty, induced executives to campaign more actively for large salary increases and was accompanied by no change at all in productivity increases in the companies and industries and economies led by these ever-more-grandly-paid executives. In short, the increased pay for top executives was economically unjustified.

Piketty shows, very neatly, that progressive taxes on income from work ... intended as social policy to cap unjustified variation in the distribution of wealth ... do not accomplish their on-the-face-of-things purpose since economic gain by the wealthiest individuals comes not from income paid for labor but instead from return on capital (stocks, real estate, business ownership, rents, ...).

Any college-ready high school graduate can easily understand Piketty's high-school-math-level algebraic expressions - after climbing past the fact that Piketty is drawn to Greek letters and the use of italics, features which apparently increase the mystery and self-evident truth of these expressions - and then reading the definitions of each of the symbols (if you can find a single, precise definition of each term). The fondness for Greek letters, in fact the parameters used in Piketty's equations, comes from prior work in economics. With respect to definitions of terms, the term g for growth gets multiple definitions that are scattered across locations in the text separated by hundreds of pages. There is no table of abbreviations for the book. If you happen to remember that g means "growth," that r means rate of return on capital, and that â means capital/income ratio, you can go to the index where, for each of those three terms expressed as words, not symbols, you will find more than a dozen page references through which you can roam in search of definitions!

Piketty writes with the intent to dazzle, perhaps to overwhelm, certainly to convince, not with the intent to communicate with precision.

Life's outcomes have many influences, not just a few

Piketty's four equations name eight variables ... some of them like â , the capital/income ratio in an economy, being at least as much an "outcome," a result following from the presence and size and trends in other variables as it is a "cause" or "input." Piketty, as is the wont of economists, likes to explain vast results using a few, simple ideas (variables) and relationships (equations). The habit showcases the great weaknesses of economics as a scientific discipline, important and useful though economics can be when it steps past its habit of over simplification and its habit of "taking thought" as the only scientific method needed to build useful theory. For example, Keynes' notion that governments are the lender of last resort and must step in to spend, creating work when other organizations are creating too little work as economies turn down, is an idea that has served the US on several occasions although it is an idea yet to be learned in Germany at this very moment.

This reader emerged from a different branch of the behavioral and management sciences, not from economics. Asked to name my sciences, I use terms like "industrial and organizational psychology," "statistics," "psychometrics," even "behavioral and management science." Few have heard of these disciplines. I spent my five-decade career in corporate America's organizations. In a volunteer effort during retirement recently, I addressed a research question - "What influences the price that a patron of the arts is willing to pay when buying a piece of art that is being offered for sale by the artist himself/herself in the first sale of the piece?" - and, within days of beginning the work, had designed data examination for my main sample in which 45 variables were used to describe each transaction (purchase). I then soon added a benchmark sample of observations in which I sought data about 30 similar variables describing the art-buying habits of each of my reporting buyers of art. Those 75 variables, after analysis, shook down to about five important, independent influences on the act of making a purchase of a piece of art. Am I going to admire Piketty's work when his single variable, g (growth), is described on the one hand as an indicator of productivity and, on the other, as an indicator of the growth or decline of the world's human population ... obviously two variables encapsulated as one variable in his equations? Am I going to admire Piketty's work when he believes that g-productivity is related to technological innovation and, at the same time, thinks that the rate of innovation in the future is going to remain "steady as she goes" at the rate experienced over the last four centuries?

Technical weaknesses in Piketty's work

The major weaknesses in Piketty's approach to economic justice are that it is oversimplified and that it won't work. But before we get to those fatal flaws, let's look at some smaller issues.

Piketty is not a competent technician. It has been the practice, since Rene Descartes invented he practce in the 1600s, to draw graphs using two dimensions. The practice works so nicely in a two-dimensional medium ... on paper. Each dimension is specified in units that are announced ... monetary units, say, on the vertical dimension and time in years on the horizontal dimension. One unit is expressed by a chosen distance and that distance remains the same for each successive unit. Exceptions are sometimes adopted as when a dimension is delineated using logarithmic units. The choice in all cases, since Descartes, is to specify the units being used and then stick to using those units for at least the graph in hand. Piketty violates this communication convention. He often chooses to let a unit of distance on his graph represent any variable quantity he wishes ... as in Figure 2.2 (page 80) where he graphs the world's population growth rate. The vertical dimension on the graph is in units of 0.2 percent ... fair enough. Equal horizontal dimensions represent 1000, 500, 200, 120, 90, 40, 20, 20, 20, 20, 20, 20, and 30 years in that order. He continues this irregular practice for six graphs in Chapter 2. In Chapter 3 Piketty uses horizontal equal distances to represent 50, 30, 30, 40, 30, 30, 10, 30, 20, 20, 10, and 10 years respectively in Figure 3.6 (page 126), a practice repeated throughout Chapter 3. He then describes the resulting curves as U curves or Bell curves. Statisticians typically reserve the name "Bell curve" for a graph of the "normal distribution," a shape precisely described by a mathematical expression. Writers often take liberties and apply the name "Bell curve" to curves of roughly similar shape. Piketty uses the phrase "Bell curve" occasionally to describe badly distorted (skewed) curves. Piketty offers no explanation for his distortion of ordinary reporting practices and seems not to know enough to understand that a strongly skewed distribution is not appropriately described as a Bell curve. Following Piketty's practices, one can make a dip in a trend line look like a disastrous crash.

Piketty is not a competent statistician. On page 484, Piketty writes "The most firmly established result in this area of research is that intergenerational reproduction is lowest in the Nordic countries and highest in the United States (with a correlation two thirds higher than in Sweden) ..." Suspecting Piketty of statistical naivete, I followed him to his Footnote 28 for that statement where he confirmed my suspicion. He writes "The correlation coefficient ranges from 0.2 - 0.3 in Sweden and Finland to 0.5 - 0.6 in the United States ..." Correlation coefficients are evaluated and compared after squaring them. Squaring 0.2 for Sweden and 0.5 for the United States yield 0.04 and 0.25 respectively, and 0.25 is six times as high as the Swedish coefficient, not "two thirds higher" as Piketty writes. Economists typically are much better statisticians than Piketty turns out to be.

Piketty cites novelists' descriptions, particularly Jane Austin's and Honore de Balzac's descriptions, of the life of wealthy people in the nineteenth century as a touchstone both for the meaning of and style of life in the upper centile of income/wealth and as a means for conveying the meaning and social acceptance of income/wealth at this level. He seeks to reflect the multiple meanings and social connotations of a term like "rent" instead of defining that term in an economic context and continued use of the term based on his definition. See in particular Piketty's Chapter Eleven where he reviews the meaning of "merit (in the value of one's job performance) and inheritance" as the means for acquiring wealth. In these discussions Piketty reveals particularly his willingness to be a novelist rather than a behavioral scientist. These are value choices with political roots and have no direct connection with "behavioral science" or "science" as empirically based searches for underlying relationships among variables. Piketty seeks to be an engrossing writer, a goal that is important, but loses accuracy in meaning, a characteristic that science values.

Piketty's work is of real service in promoting discussion of the extremes of individual and family wealth by doing his search into the historical records of France, Britain, the US, and other countries. But his evaluation of what he has found does not meet standards of critical thinking or mathematical and statistical standards of reporting and thus risks badly misleading the general publics for which he writes who, themselves, are unprepared to make these evaluations, separating that of value from Piketty's mistakes and pure nonsense.

Piketty's "solution" won't work

Piketty's concerns ... that extremes of individual and family wealth can be extended, are being amplified, by current public policies and economic behavior and that continued or extended extremes in individual and family wealth can lead to political instability ... are well grounded although not very well documented. His solution - install a tax on wealth - won't work.

Piketty is right in his understanding that public policies can be wisely built only if we have information about the activity we seek to understand. He understands correctly that data about wealth and income, even in countries with advanced tax reporting practices, are very incomplete. He hopes banks worldwide will be persuaded - perhaps by the US Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act of 2010 - to share information so that all nations, including the US as the US intends, can trace the wealth of their own citizens anywhere in the world, a capability not now available. Piketty is right in principle but wrong with respect to some important details. How does one identify the owner of a bank account ... by her/his US Social Security Number ... by a universal identification number adopted by all the world's nations and applied retroactively to all those alive now? How does one get all nations to require that their banks comply? The more nations that comply, the greater become the advantages of the banks in the non-complying nations. They become prospective tax havens. Do we have to review the history of why so many US corporations are incorporated in the state of Delaware to understand that local governments have strong reasons to woo wealthy citizens and organizations as local residents? Piketty's hope that there will be universal sharing of information among the banks of the world in the relatively near future is poorly placed. If the nations of the world have no believable information base that can be used to guide the levying of a wealth tax, a wealth tax cannot accomplish its intended policy goals.

Nations do have the option of rationalizing the taxes levied on their own citizens and corporations with respect to income and wealth. Such action with respect to taxes could have a major influence, within a country, decreasing income disparity and increasing justice in the distribution of income/wealth. In that very limited sense, Piketty's tax-based "solution" could have an important impact. Changes in tax policy have had important impacts on the distribution of wealth within individual counties in the twentieth century as Piketty's histories reveal. However, as can be seen anywhere one looks, individual nations find it difficult to muster the political will, whether by democratic means or by autocratic means, to make changes in tax policy in the direction of justice. In democracies, not even college graduates know enough to understand the issues and vote intelligently on the matter. Persuasive messages delivered by mass media under the guidance of well-funded interests win many votes supporting past solutions ... the way things were. In autocracies, government leaders often have many reasons for preserving the power and wealth accumulated in the past. Piketty's solution won't be adopted in the foreseeable future.

An approach to economic justice that can work

I'm a scientist who observes, measures, and seeks to guide improvements in organizational productivity ... a scientist who recognizes that Company A is vital and constantly reinventing itself for survival and growth whereas Company B is moribund and about to fail. I'm a psychologist who recognizes that society today fails to perceive accurately the many qualities of performance at work accomplished by individuals or teams, rewarding outstanding work and assigning new work based upon the quality and features of past performance. I have many friends in management who declare "We try and we succeed," but they're wrong when judged by the standards that my sciences have developed and demonstrated. I'm deeply convinced that recognizing and rewarding outstanding performance will allow societies - drawing these examples of poor performance solely from recent US history in the private economic sector - to avoid failures like Enron, Worldcom, Lehman Brothers, AIG, Bear Stearns, Washington Mutual, Madoff investments, and General Motors, escaping the huge costs of those and many other similar mistakes. I'm deeply convinced, and have evidence supporting my convictions, that recognizing and rewarding outstanding performance at work can quadruple the per capita world's GDP in a few decades and provide resources about which we dare not now dream that can be used to change how we live and treat each other, worldwide.

Pinker (2011) has charted how humanity has decreased the rate at which it behaves violently against fellow humans across a human history covering tens of thousands of years. Humans do learn and transmit what they know to successive generations through a process we can call acculturation. But the learning process need not take tens of thousands of years!

My sciences know how to measure individual and organizational performance as it varies from month to month, year to year. Using that knowledge, individual organizations could, if they would, allocate rewards and assign responsibilities based on those measurements. The approach I propose - measure job performance within an organization and assign new responsibilities, allocating rewards, based on those measurements - will give organizations competitive advantage through dramatic increases in productivity. We'll all recognize that working effectively brings justly earned rewards! Getting ahead is not simply a matter of politics. In this new order, the dunces of the world don't get rewarded. There are personal rewards that follow from being productive. Other organizations, seeing the success, will adopt similar practices. The practice spreads from organization to organization by competitive pressure, not by the impossible-to-win agreement among the world's governments that Piketty's "solution" of a tax on wealth requires. Having grandly increased productivity by rewarding those who merit reward, giving leadership responsibilities to those who have learned how to lead well and with integrity, the world would quickly become a fairer world, a world with per capita GDP at least four times the current level without having asked anyone to work harder, a world with resources it cannot dream of now, a world that is much more generous and ready to help those who cannot help themselves than is today's world, a world having many fewer excuses to engage in terrorism because of economic injustice.

Piketty is plain wrong in modeling the future as if productivity, g, is destined to carry forward at the rate experienced in the last four centuries! His equation explaining divergence in wealth, the equation saying r > g, may have been true most of the time during the last four centuries, but that fact offers no guarantee that it will be true in the years, decades, and centuries ahead. In fact, my proposal, that working life adopt measures to reward those who perform well and place in leadership roles those who can perform responsibly in those roles, can change our economic performance so that increasing productivity far exceeds the influence of population growth/decay or rate of return on capital investments and transforms economies and people's economic behavior around the world. We already know how job performance measurement should be done and how to make that information available for guiding decisions. Spreading that knowledge and finding the will to make the changes are the hurdles that need to be crossed on the way to real competence and justice in the working world.

Is Piketty's book worth a read?

Yes, one cannot move into the future as a well informed person without having understood Piketty's approach and his historical findings with respect to extreme wealth in Europe and the US. Piketty opens the door to the need to know more ... much more. He's right about the need for much more information upon which to base, and with which to evaluate, public policies. He's right in understanding that extremes in wealth threaten the world's political stability. We can see that sad truth in the news headlines that keep repeating themselves decade after decade.

However few readers will be prepared to separate the value in Piketty's work from its shear nonsense and errors. Wouldn't it be grand if the Wall Street Journal and the Financial Times published this review, if the Belknap Press of Harvard University Press were to publish this review as a part of all future printings of Piketty's book! How else will readers be educated quickly and avoid following Piketty's advice only to find, over decades of time, that it doesn't work?

Bellevue, Washington
2 November 2014

Copyright © 2014 by Paul F. Ross
All rights reserved.

References

Piketty, Thomas Capital in the twenty-first century 2014, The Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, Cambridge MA

Pinker, Steven The better angels of our nature: Why violence has declined 2011, Viking, New York NY
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weston
5.0 out of 5 stars "Capital in the Twenty-First Century" by Thomas Piketty.
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on June 3, 2014
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The author has compiled an edifying description of how the advanced economies of western Europe and North America work, by mining the tax, probate and other financial records of France and England, which are available since the 1700s, and the more recent such records for the other European countries , the USA and Canada. His case is constructed around evaluation of the terms in two standard economics formulas. The first formula beta = s/g has been used since the 1930s to relate the capital-to-income ratio (beta) for a nation to the national savings rate s and the structural growth rate g, which is related to the increases in per capita productivity and in population. The second formula is for the share of the national income that goes to those who provide the capital, alpha = r x beta = r x s/g, where r is the rate of return on capital. The historical data indicate that the capital-to-income ratio beta is about 5-6 (i.e. the value of the national capital, which is overwhelmingly private, is about 5-6 times larger than the annual national income) in Europe today. This value of beta is slightly less than the level in the 18th and 19th centuries and up to the two world wars of the 20th century. The author estimates that the global capital-to-income ratio could obtain a level of beta = 7-8 during the present century, and that the share of the national and global incomes that go to those who provide the capital, alpha = r x beta, could increase to 30-40%. A principal result of this study would seem to be that there is not any purely economic force that will reduce the importance of capital nor redirect the income flowing from production away from the owners of capital to the actual producers or others in the society

The author, an authority on wealth and income inequality, provides some stunning figures on this topic. The US national income (from capital investment and wages) in 2010 was distributed 20% to the top 1% of earners, 30% to the next 9% of earners, 30% to the "middle" 40% of earners and 20% to the lowest 50% of earners. By comparison, the French national income in the same year was distributed 10% to the top 1%, 25% to the next 9%, 40% to the middle 40% and 25% to the lower 50%. In the US, the fraction of national income (return on capital plus wages) received by the upper 10% of earners has increased from 30-35% in the 1980s to 45-50% in the 2000s, and 75% of the increase in national income between 1997-2007 went to this upper 10%.

Tax records show that much of this increase was due to extraordinary salaries received by top managers in corporate and financial institutions, particular in the US where the share of national income of the top 1% increased from 8% in the 1980s to 20% today; by comparison in France the increase was from 7% in the 1980s to 9% today. For the upper 1/10% of earners in the US, incomes increased from 20 times the national average in the 1980s to 100 times the national average today. Only Colombia and Argentina have such a privileged upper class as the US. In considering the possible reasons for such incredible increases in the salaries paid top managers, the author notes that they are essentially in a position, collectively, to set their own salaries, that the onset of these enormous raises was coincident with the decrease in marginal income tax rates in the English-speaking countries in the 1980s, and that the beneficiaries are able to finance politicians to increase such favorable laws.

In all known societies in all times, the top 10% in the wealth hierarchy has owned most of what there was to be owned, 90% of it in Europe and 80% of it in the US at the beginning of the 20th century. This concentration of wealth by those with capital to invest was explained by a low productivity growth rate (g), which was below 1% before the 17th century and peaked at about 4% in the second half of the 20th century and is now down to 1.5% and dropping, in conjunction with a return on capital (r) of 4-5% throughout recorded history. In fact the author concludes that whenever the rate of return on capital is significantly and durably higher than the growth rate of the economy it is inevitable that inherited wealth dominates over earned wealth in the accumulation of more wealth. Because of the introduction of a progressive income tax on capital and its income and the destruction of wealth in 2 world wars, there was a deconcentration of wealth in the 20th century, leaving the top 10% with 60% of the wealth in Europe and 70% in the US at the beginning of the 21st century.

Interesting data are presented on the fraction from inheritance of the lifetime resources of all people born in France in a certain period. The inherited fraction of lifetime resources was 25% for those born in the 1790s through the mid-19th centrury, but then declined to about 10% for those born in the 1910s, then began to increase--to 14% for those born in the 1930-50s and to 23% for those born in the 1970-80s. A comparison of the lifetime resources available to two fortunate classes of Frenchmen--those in the top 1% of inheritors and those in the top 1% of wage earners--indicated that the top 1% of inheritors enjoyed resources 25-30 times the average of the lower 50% of French wage earners during the 19th century, while the top 10% of wage earners enjoyed resources 10 times those of the lower 50%. For the generations born in 1910-20, the lifetime resources of the top 1% of inheritors was only 5 times that of the lower 50% of the wage earners, while the top 1% of inheritors still enjoyed 10 times more resources than the lower 50% of wage earners. For the generations born after 1970, both the top 1% of wage earners and top 1% of inheritors can expect to enjoy about 10 times the lifetime resources of the average lower class wage earner. Another way to characterize inheritance is in terms of the percentage of people born in a given year who inherit amounts that are larger than the lower 50% of wage earners born that year will earn in their lifetime--for France this was about 10% for people born in 1790-1830, dropped to about 2% for people born in 1900-1915 and has increase since to 13% in 2010.

The author concludes his case against the inegalitarian distribution of wealth and income by noting that those with great wealth at their disposal (the upper 1%, the Harvard Board of Overseers, Sovereign Wealth Funds, etc.) can get higher returns on capital than the average investor because they can afford better financial advice on their investments. He then turns in Part Four to his proposed solution, an improved socialist state for the twenty-first solution in which an increased fraction of the national income goes to the government to be redistributed to "finance public services and replacement incomes that are more or less equal for everyone, especially in the areas of health, education and pensions."

He reviews the growth of national income taxes from the < 10% level at the beginning of the 20th century, which was sufficient for a government to perform the "regalian" functions (police, courts, army, foreign affairs, administrations, etc.) to a new equilibrium at the end of the 20th century in which 30-55% of the national income is recovered by the governments for redistribution (Sweden 55%, France 50%, England 40%, US 30%). In the "first-world" countries today, government spending on the basic regalian functions accounts for 10% of tax revenue, 10-15% is spent for health and education (in equal parts), and the remainder is spent for "replacement incomes" (pensions and unemployment compensation) and "transfer payments" (family allowances, guaranteed minimum income, etc.). This breakdown does not separate out major government functions such as scientific/energy/medical R&D, space programs, payment of interest and capital on debt, etc., but nevertheless provides a general idea of where the tax dollars go.

There follows an arguement for reforming and extending (through higher tax rates) the socialist aspects of the present western governments, with the education and pension systems identified as issues of particular importance (I think science/ energy/medical research and for the US health care should be included among these issues.). My personal reaction to the author¡¯s recommendation to increase the socialist state is that while some level of socialism may be working in western Europe, large-scale socialism was an unmitigated disaster in the USSR and eastern Europe in the second half of the 20th century, changing the beneficiaries but not reducing the non-egalitarianism of wealth distribution. It was maintained only by guns and barbed wire at the borders, pointed not outwards to repel those clamoring to get in, but inwards to prevent citizens from fleeing.

A number of suggested reforms are described, which seem to be good ideas independent of whether the socialistic aspects of the governments are extended. The first is a return to the progressive taxes on large incomes and large inheritances, which were introduced early in the 20th century but drastically reduced after 1980. The top marginal income tax rate in the US increased from less than 10% at the beginning of the century to 90% at mid-century, was reduced to 70% by 1980 and is presently at 28%. In France the top rate increased from 2% in 1914 to 50% in 1920 to 70% in 1925, then dropped to 50% where it remains today. The English top marginal income tax rate paralleled the US rate, even rising to 98% for many years in mid-century, only to drop to 40% by 1990 and 50% at present, and the German top rate closely paralleled the French rate, except for a very high top rate imposed by the occupying victors immediately following WW2. The top marginal inheritance taxes in the US and England also increased from very low levels at the beginning of the century to about 80% by mid-century, dropping after 1980 to 35 and 40%, respectively. In marked contrast, the top marginal inheritance tax rate in France and Germany never exceeded 30-40% except immediately after WW2 in Germany.

A correlation is shown between the top marginal income tax rate and the explosion of top executive salaries, the outsized raises needed for which would not have made sense to anyone if they all went for taxes. He theorizes that restoring exorbitant tax rates (>90%) on exorbitant salaries (>$500,000 to $1,000,000) would solve the social unrest problem caused by such people enriching themselves by transferring corporate shareholder wealth to private (their own) wealth in full public view, without any reasonable justification other than that they can get away with it The author calculates that the extra tax revenue would not really enable the increase in socialistic government services that he favors, which would require raising the income tax rate to 50-60% on annual earnings above $200,000, an altogether different matter which would drastically affect the lives of the people involved. The suggestions for a global tax on capital and a redistribution of petroleum revenues would seem to require some form of a global government, which seems unlikely any time soon.

On the issue of public debt, the repayment of which he considers a transfer of wealth from those who pay the taxes to those who have the means to lend to the government, the author has several suggestions. Large public debts can be paid off from taxes (he argues for progressive taxes on wealth), or, in effect, by high inflation (which has unpredictable side effects like Hitler coming to power in Germany), or it can just be repudiated,with more predictable negative consequences.

In summary, the author argues that the principal destabilizing force in modern democracies is that the rate of return on capital is greater than the growth rate , r > g, for long periods of time, implying that wealth accumulated in the past grows faster than output and wages, leading to extreme concentration of wealth and inequality of circumstances. With the r = 4-5% and g = 1.0-1.5% which he anticipates for the 21st century, this would have disastrous consequences. He argues that the correct solution is a progressive annual tax on capital, but acknowledges that this would require a high degree of international cooperation and regional political integration to accomplish.

I strongly recommend this very edifying book to anyone interested in an economics view, supported by extensive historical data, of how the western world works. You must be prepared to work through almost 600 pages filled with economics jargon and numbers, but it is worth the effort.
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A. Menon
5.0 out of 5 stars indepth view of the distribution of profits to labour and capital through time with focus on France and US
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on April 22, 2014
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First off I'd like to state that the data that the author has compiled is very impressive and provides the reader with a new way to look at both the stock and flow of wealth of society and its distribution. It is unique and comprehensive and for this aspect of the book it is landmark and hopefully will improve and refine our thinking about capital and inequality going forward. The conclusions of the author i think are very suspect and not nearly as insightful as the analysis, but they are where the author's politics come out and are a relatively smaller portion of the book. The need to move beyond looking at crude measures of inequality like the Gini coefficient and distribution of profits between labour and capital was much needed and the author was able to, through meticulous analysis look at the entire distribution of wealth through society by looking at the bottom 50%, top 10% top 1% and top .1% when possible both from a labour and capital perspective. The dataset is not global, though the author was able to partially reconstruct a broad range of countries, but includes the US, France, UK, Germany aspects of Japan and the Scandinavian countries with a focus on the US and France.

The book is split into 4 part. The first three parts are both an introduction to the economics as well the accompanying economic analysis of the accompanying datasets. The first part - income and capital start out by defining the basics of what the author will discuss throughout the book namely income, capital and how the output of society is distributed and how that has changed over time. National accounting is discussed, the capital stock and its properties are introduced as well as some key identities that will be used throughout regarding the share of income going to capital which is determined by the return of capital and the size of the capital stock relative to annual output. The author also discusses growth over time documenting global growth rates over time and introduces to the unfamiliar reader the consequences of how small changes in growth compounded can lead to large cumulative changes. The author discusses demographic trends globally through time and some of the dynamics of them (which are largely unpredictable). The author also discusses how growth and demographics can influence the capital intensity of the economy. The author also discusses how the sectors of the economy and output have changed over time with agriculture and its share of both labour and capital much lower but the service sector replacing it and how manufacturing intensity and capital replaced agricultural through the industrial revolution as well. He also discusses modern concerns about growth by discussing Robert Gordon's recent paper on the end of growth and whether techonological innovation has run much of its course, he is relatively optimistic but nonetheless foresees growth following a bell curve for which we are at a peak which will decline but to much higher levels than centuries in the past. The author also discusses inflation and monetary policy and how it has changed over time.

The second part of the book is called the dynamiocs of the capital/income ratio. It is about precisely that with the author starting out by using novels to introduce the reader to society in the past. In particular the author refers repeatedly to Balzac and at times to Jane Austen to remind the reader what society was like in the 19th century. The core of the data set starts to become apparant in the second section with the author documenting the capital/income ratio over time in Britain peaking at 7x in 1700 falling to 2x post the first world war. The author includes the same information for france as well. The author discusses how foreign capital was important in the 19th and early 20th centuries during the colonial period and discusses the role of government debt and how it does not change national wealth just the distribution of wealth within the population. The author includes the value of national wealth through time by showing both public assets and public debt over time. The author discusses economic theory and how Ricardian equivalence is strictly only true of economies have a representative agent, which they do not hence the principal should be considered suspect. The author discusses the capital stock through the world wars and how it changed dramatically during the 20th century, though the capital stock has had a recent resurgence as economic policy has drifted back toward free market capitalism. The author then moves to look at the New World and in particular the US and repeats the analysis there as well (though the author starts with Germany as well). In the US the capital stock was more stable (it wasnt a colonial power which was a large part of the capital stock of the UK and to a lesse extent France). Canada is also analyzed as another data point. The author also discusses regional differences by including the differences between the South and the North and the repurcussions of Slavery to the capital/income ratio. The south had a much higher capital/income ratio as much of its human capital was effectively consdered part of the capital stock. The author shows the distribution of capital over time in the US from 1770 to today as well as spot distribution of wealth data points for UK and France. The author starts to discuss the dynamics of the capital/income ratio through his second law of capitalism, namely the ratio is equal to savings/growth. This is the result of the differentiam equation that leads to steady state rather than an identity which holds true at any given point of time. The author then moves into discussing the capital stock over the last 40 years and how its been on a resurgent trend that has been catalyzed by the s/g relationship as well as privatizations. The author discusses the components of savings, the resurgence of the value of capital and where the capital/income ratio is going. The author moves on to the Capital/labor split and its evolution through the 21st century. In particular with the resurgence of growth in the capital stock the trend towards growing labor share in the 20th century has reversed itself and we are heading towards the 19th century. There are regional differences with countries like the US being counterexamples with the rise of the supermanager.

The third part of the book is The structure of inequality. This is where the value of the books data set gets particularly apparant. The author discusses how the labor share of income has changed over time for the various portions of the population, in particular for the top 10 and top 1%. He discusses how the ownership of the capital stock has become less concentrated and there has been an emerging middle class of owners of capital. The author discusses how different countries have had different evolutions between there ownerships of capital and how the labour share of income is divided with the US having a more distributed capital base but a much more concentrated labour share distribution. The author discusses the "merit" of the distribution of labor income and how there is a conflict of interest now for supermanagers and the growth in the supermanager has coincided with the decline in the progressivity of the income tax. The author discusses the flow of income through inheritance and analyses the dynamics of this flow based on the ownership of the capital stock by age group and mortality rates. This form of analysis is definitely an important addition and goes against conventional wisdom of aging populations spending their savings on lifestyle maintenance. I would be very interested to know how this process is evolving in Japan and Italy for example. The author also discusses inequality at the global level and how there are increasing returns to scale in capital (this is definitely not a fact and much evidence is to the contrary but an empirical observation made by the author on a few examples). The author also looks at the growing share of wealth of the top centile and billionaires in particular. He discusses how Bill Gates and the Bettencourt family have had the same return on their capital over time despite one being self made and the other inherited reinforcing his thesis that growing capital has its own momentum based on the fact that if the return on capital is greather than the growth rate capital continues to accumulate to those who have it- a central point throughout the book.

The 4th part is Regulating Capital in the 21st century. It is the authors partial solutions to the growing inequality that we see that is due to inherint dynamics and unrelated to the merits of an individuals labour contribution or the foresight of those investing in the future capital stock. It discusses ideas like rethinking progressive tax, increasing the top income bracket to 80% to diffuse the rent seeking behaviour of the super manager. It includes ideas on taxing capital, in particular a graduating tax on capital to both make sure people are using the capital stock efficiently as well as counteracting the benefits of the economies of scale the author has been pointing out. Lastly the author focuses on the pressing problem of public debt with a focus on Europe.

The data the author has compiled has allowed him to look at the distribution of wealth in much of the Western world through a more refined lense. It is full of important insight and a true developement that takes us to a level with much more granular detail than what typically is focused on. For that reason the book is a must read and is definitely a 5* book. The policy recommendations i put far less value on. The author is focused on the distribution of wealth and the solutions he proposes are designed to get those more in line with politically what he believes is a more fair distribution, thus they are focused on optimizing a distributional outcome. Recommending confiscating capital to pay down national debt is an example of a solution to a problem without considering the consequences of the action on the future dynamics of the economic system. Though the solution might seem fair, it is also insane as funding the flow of capital stock would totally change. Discussing a policy that could have better dealt with preventing the ex ante buildup of national debt is better than discussing one that ex post unwinds it far more dramatically. In addition ideas like just taxing capital at higher rates depending on one's capital base is highly questionable. Imagine each year if an entrepreneur has to give up 5-10% of his equity of his company (as capital has migrated from land to financial capital this is precisely what will be required) then the world would be very different and I am a skeptic it would be a more utopian society. Generation transfer is far more dangerous than capital accumulation through a lifetime and the author's policy perscriptions are political and one gets a sense he is stepping outside his comfort zone of impacting wealth inequality and into impacting economic growth, which is another big factor in decreasing economic inequality. There are many things that are scary- in the UK the top 5 families own more than the bottom 20% with 2 of those 5 are ancestors of those who owned the fields which London was built on. Between the 2 facts above I worry far more about the fact that 2 are from ancient landowning families, a form of capital stock that does not depreciate than the former, which is worrisome, but a more granular analysis of the asset base and its properties would be required. Achieving better distribution of wealth is not about just taxing capital more (though that should be a part of it). We need better policies, this is a start in how to look at the problem more clearly. The solutions are food for thought, but at this stage only that- as the author states, economics is not a science it is a social science and democratic deliberation is necessary to help us decide what policies society believes in. This helps provide better tools to answer some of the questions we have to ask ourselves about why the asset base is owned as it is and how does that fit with our beliefs in how society should be organized considering all dimensions like individual merit, equality of opportunity, sanctity of contract for providing the right base incentives etc...
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Mike
5.0 out of 5 stars It caused me to write.
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on June 6, 2014
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When Our Elites Fail Us

Aimlessly drifting into our sixth year of our fifth recession since 1980, I wondered what caused our prolonged societal economic repression. Two themes were revealed through the most recent Princeton and Northwestern University study, “Testing Theories of American Politics: Elites, Interest Groups, and Average Citizens” by Martin Gilens and Benjamin I. Page as well as Martin Wolf of The Financial Times commentary “Failing Elites Threaten our Future”.

The evidence of a waning Democratic Republic and an evolving Oligarchy in America has been credibly validated with these dominate themes.

-The unmitigated failure of our political, intellectual and financial elites to fully grasp the thirty-four year effect of financial reforms. This includes heretical Supply-Side Economics, non-enforcement of anti-trust laws, dysfunctional tax policy, low to negative interest rates misallocating capital (subprime mortgages), deregulation of banks, massive expansion of personal debt related to real estate, front running stock markets with high frequency trading shaving as much as $8 Billion per year from normal customers, the dogmatism of the elites that no matter what we do, the marketplace will self-correct, and if not, the federal government will bail us out, and the economy will interminably grow at ever increasing rates. In fact, the financial sector grew at twice the rate of growth of the whole economy since 1980 shaving trillions of dollars from sound investment, growth and employment. The financial sector alone consumes 9% of our $17 Trillion economy or $1.53 Trillion, which is an all time high and approximately three times historical average of 3%. Healthcare and finance as industries now represent 30% of our total economy which is a massive misallocation of resources as well as unsustainable.

-The political and economic elite’s subordination of middle and working classes to unbridled corporate influence of government. This includes low-wage seeking behaviors including; unfettered free trade, factory and job export, wage suppression via the lack of a realistic minimum wage, expanding right to work laws and massive illegal immigration, deliberate economic growth restraint by corporations retarding capital investment in exchange for share buy-backs with cheap to free Federal Reserve money, Citizens United Supreme Court ruling that made cash-rich corporations “people” replete with first amendment rights and no limits on political donations, audacious congressional redistricting coupled with deviously creative voter suppression facilitating it all seamlessly.

Societies, like ours, are sophisticated and very complicated. They rely on our elites to manage political and economic continuity and to provide for the future strategic development of the society.

American elites have deplorably failed the Republic and 99% of its citizenry based on the structural economic conditions initiated in the early 1980’s. If you were wondering what it takes to get to the top 1% in wealth or income, it is $8.4 Million in wealth (Excluding your principal residence) or $380,000 in annual income.

The cause of our ongoing economic degeneracy, stagnation and misery is the struggle between labor (people) and capital (money). We have permitted capital to wrench control of our democratic election processes via Congressional redistricting, specious 5 to 4 Supreme Court election law decisions, massive infusions of personal and corporate campaign money into elections, as well as grievous voter suppression.

President Lincoln, a Republican from Illinois, understood this inherent struggle in his first annual address to Congress in 1861. He said,” Labor is prior to, and independent of, capital. Capital is only the fruit of labor, and could never have existed if labor had not first existed. Labor is the superior of capital, and deserves much the higher consideration."

So according to Lincoln over the last 34 years we have managed to turn the foundations of our Republic virtually upside down. Lincoln went on to say,

"Capital has its rights, which are as worthy of protection as any other rights.... Nor should this lead to a war upon the owners of property. Property is the fruit of labor; . . . property is desirable; is a positive good in the world… Let not him who is houseless pull down the house of another, but let him work diligently and build one for himself, thus by example assuring that his own shall be safe from violence when built."

Lincoln deeply understood labor and capital when he revealed the desired balance of the two, "I hold that while man exists, it is his duty to improve not only his own condition, but to assist in ameliorating mankind."

What we have in our Congress is the manifestation of capital exceeding its logical democratic political frontier and it explains why the Congress has a registered voter approval rating of 9%.

To affirm that Congress is “owned and operated” by capital and not the people, there are 12,278 registered lobbyists in Washington DC. That is 28 per congressman or 123 for each senator. During 2013, lobbyists “invested” $3.21 Billion in Congress. Many of the most popular beliefs with majorities of support are not put into law. The best example is the 90% popular support on “background checks” for gun purchases that has yet to be nationally legislated.

This appropriation of political control has placed our Republic at long-term existential risk with the Wisconsin Republicans actually voting on Wisconsin secession from the United States this very weekend.

It has also pushed national debt to $17.5 Trillion or $151,832 per taxpayer with over 94% of the debt created after 1980. Since 1980, 99% of us have been sacrificed to the 1% that created this new political economic framework. While equity markets have recovered from the last financial crisis, the average American continues to struggle with stagnant to declining wages and record high aggregate personal family debt that now exceeds $16 Trillion.

Those, 50 years or older, that were disengaged from the work force; continue looking to find equivalent employment. Work force participation has declined to 63.2% and is the lowest in 35 years. This implies that 92.5 Million potential American workers are not participating in the labor market.

Depressed private sector hourly real wage rates (Inflation adjusted) over forty-six years have only increased 4% from $19.53 in 1967 to $20.31 in 2013. The real minimum wage rate (inflation adjusted) over the same time frame actually declined 25% from $9.69 to $7.25. This abhorrent history of wage suppression has forced 47,792,056 Americans to utilize “food stamps”, with fully half of the recipients working full-time and over $100 Million redeemed on military bases by over 900,000 veterans and active duty personal. This is a fourfold increase from 2006.

We have an anemic recovery and little has been done to effectively put people back to work. Our infrastructure is literally disintegrating and we refuse to rebuild it. Here in Wisconsin Governor Walker refused the national high-speed rail project and turned away $.8 Billion in Federal Investment. He also refused the expansion of Medicaid throwing 77,000 people off Badger Care effectively denying them 100% federally funded healthcare. This absurd action is estimated to cost Wisconsin $1.8 Billion by 2022 and many may die needlessly.

On the very day I drafted this commentary, it was reported that many of the same financial elites that created our structural economic challenges, were receiving massive annual compensation increases including; Brian Moynihan- Bank of America +89% to $14 Million, Jamie Dimon- JP Morgan +74% to $20 Million, Michael Corbat-Citigroup +42% to $17.6 Million and Stuart Gulliver-HSBC +20% to $14.9 Million.

The American people, by way of the US Treasury and the Federal Reserve, bailed these global banks
out of bankruptcy. It is unconscionable that the Boards of these institutions disdainfully spurned the American people with these outrageous compensation increases. These behaviors cast a very long shadow on our society and surely will not be forgotten for generations.

Since 2008, large banks have paid over $100 Billion in fines for illegal behaviors including: personal and corporate tax evasion, manipulation of interest and foreign exchange rates, fraudulent representation of mortgage aggregations, high speed front-running to manipulate stock market pricing, money laundering for terrorists and criminals, artificially suppressing gold prices, illegally shaving money from pension transactions, financing illegal arms deals, gaming foreclosure laws meant to protect homeowners, manipulating the multi-trillion-dollar derivatives market and a host of other criminal activities. The banking investigations continue. Astonishingly, unlike the Savings and Loan crisis (1986-1995) where over 800 people were jailed, there have been no major bankers indicted for criminal behaviors, but it has been described as only being in the third inning. To this, I would agree with Winston Churchill when he said, “I would rather see Finance less proud and Industry more content.”

The American people that have been most adversely affected have little, and soon to be less, influence on the politicians having been rendered politically powerless in the new economic order that has embedded itself in the Republic.

The dissociation of sovereign responsibility and power, within the Republic, tears at the very heart of our Democracy and has provided the opportunity for the choleric populism of the Tea Party and special interests to produce profound long-term detrimental societal impacts.

As the celebrated investor Warren Buffet put it, “There’s class warfare, all right, but it’s my class, the rich class, that’s making war, and we’re winning.”

The very sad certainty is, without robust citizen voter mobilization, we will continue to see very few authentic “Donkeys” or “Elephants” in our Congress as they have been rendered impotent by a mendacious confluence of money, special interests and delusional would be oligarchs. Ironically, these behaviors are not good for business either, as we have had 5 recessions spanning a total of fifty-eight months or fully 14% of the time since 1980.

The Elites and their egocentric pandered policies have failed us. The time for genuine America to respond and free itself from thirty-four years of civil suppression and economic repression begins this November 4th in the voting booth. Make it a day to remember and one to recount to your children and grandchildren. Let it be the day that the actual sensible majority of Americans began the social, political and economic recovery of the Republic.

So, if you are a “sensible ninety-niner”, and struggling to choose a candidate to vote for after reviewing what the candidates say they stand for, you may find it helpful to go to the Federal Election Commission website at: www.fec.gov

Here you can reference which candidate has raised the most campaign money and where that money came from. Then you can simply vote for the best candidate with the least amount of money raised, as it is most likely the candidate that will align with your personal interests as a “sensible ninety-niner”. It also is strategically and operationally the safest and most cost-efficient means to counter the outrageous irrational influences we have had to endure for far too many years. We all will be better off for it.

In Liberty and Justice,
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W. ALLEN DARK
4.0 out of 5 stars Thomas Piketty's Solution: Patch the Old System.
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on July 9, 2014
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Capital in the Twenty-First Century by Piketty is not a revolutionary manifesto, although it provides convincing evidence that one is needed. The book is about system management, crisis management, crisis management of a failing system. It's a bit short on imagination and creativity, no really new ideas are put forward, but it serves a purpose: after reading the book, the reader may conclude that "we the people" need to dust off our creativity and get cracking on the development of an updated economic system suitable for the twenty-first century, perhaps several alternative systems that serve essentially all of the people well and not just a few. Unfortunately, Piketty's book and his solutions may actually serve the wealthy establishment by serving as a decoy or distraction that makes no legislative progress in Washington, or anywhere else, but absorbs and dissipates human energy that might otherwise be directed towards planning and implementing real structural changes in the world economy.

The book is at the top of the sales charts, surely because it flies towards the eye of a storm gathering around a growing awareness of the destructive nature of unregulated capitalism and its natural tendency to concentrate wealth in the hands of fewer and fewer people, which is likely to morph society into something resembling a feudal society with wealth and political power concentrated in the hands of the few, and that is a situation only a baby's step away from totalitarianism. In fact, without some brakes on extraction and accumulation being applied by a realistic democratic government, the extreme right or the extreme left could take us around to the same place on the dark side of the moon: totalitarianism, control of practically everything in life by either an overly powerful gang of government bureaucrats or a tiny clan of super-wealthy aristocrats. Do we prefer one form of totalitarianism over the other? Do we prefer to be eaten by the wolf or the fox? There are many other alternatives of course, and we shouldn't let anyone restrict us to an either/or choice between two evils.

Piketty follows a narrow, straight, financial path that stays within the sphere of the existing global-capitalistic-system. He focuses on the mechanics of wealth concentration within the existing system, runs some sophisticated diagnostics and then proposes patches that might extend the life of the system, perhaps prevent or delay us from morphing or collapsing into totalitarianism.

Piketty's patches would be like adding brakes to the current model of capitalistic machine, the outdated model that's become a runaway machine and is speeding us towards extreme concentration of wealth. The main brakes would be a progressive income tax and a progressive annual wealth tax; an auxiliary brake would be a progressive estate tax; all of which are like trying to get the horses back after they've been stolen. Such taxes would not stop the excessive flow of extracted wealth away from the workers in the first place, but would divert the flow into the hands of the government, where much of it would surely be further diverted and misused, but hopefully most, or at least a big part of it would be used to reduce government debt, fund improved services for the people, pay for infrastructure projects, rebuild economies and such. I suppose one might hope a "voodoo trickle-down" process would eventually drip a few drops back to the workers, where the new wealth originated in the first place. No really new tax ideas are involved, but Piketty's ideas should be pursued, not because they provide a long-term solution but because they would be crisis management action. Of course, many, or most of us may fear the necessary tax laws could never be passed in America because the super-wealthy "lords" and "vassals" already have too much influence and are close to capturing complete control of our governmental institutions, the media and both the Democratic and Republican parties, if they haven't already, and even if the needed tax laws squeaked through all the obstacles to passage, wealthy gamesmen would immediately seek paths around the laws. Actually, the clever accumulators should be expected to make sure that plenty of escape clauses are designed into the laws before they are passed. Piketty sees the risk of that and he reminds us that the super wealthy will surely defend their position and they should be expected to strengthen their control of the political high-ground.

Strangely, Piketty does not explore fundamental changes in the system, perhaps changes in basic business ownership structures in order to flow more of the wealth created by workers into distribution to the workers and choke down the excessive extraction and flow of wealth towards the extreme accumulators. The basic piping needs to be changed closer to the point of wealth creation. He does not touch the basic master-slave relationship built into most giant investor-owned corporations that form the main structure of the existing system dominated by extreme accumulators. There is an alternative form of organization for private business enterprise: it's called the cooperative, where the workers, customers, suppliers, community or a hybrid of those people, all living in a community, are the controlling owners of the corporation. The workers and other people in a community who create the new wealth decide what to do with the enterprise and the wealth created, not a small group of outside shareholders who are extreme accumulators only interested in stuffing their individual pockets by maximizing and siphoning off the profit (surplus value created by workers). The cooperative form of business organization needs development and adoption until it becomes the main structural material of a new American economy and a high grade of civilization.

One might wish Piketty had addressed other major problems in the existing problem-riddled capitalist system: perhaps explored antitrust laws and enforcement to control monopolies, oligopolies, predatory competition, market dominance and such, and perhaps a couple of problems dealing with job losses and the weakening demand side of an unbalanced American economy that is near the capsize point due to excessive extraction and accumulation of wealth. Problems like: (1) the growing power of financial capitalists (especially the Wall Street mob) that manage accumulated wealth, use their wealth power to extract additional excessive amounts of the wealth produced by workers and, on top of that, manage and use the workers' personal savings in investments that eliminate the worker's jobs, often through investments that move the work to foreign soil, and (2) the heavily propagandized view that corporate profit is the only purpose of a corporation, which reduces the need for management to think, but results in decisions about productivity and efficiency that lead to greater automation of production, elimination of jobs and actual reduction of the worker's range of skills in a dehumanizing process of overspecialization that attempts to convert workers into machines that are part of dead nature as opposed to living nature, immobile machines of very limited use beyond a special place and time. (Prophesy coming true: Adam Smith expressed concern that with specialization, performing a few simple operations of which the effects are always or nearly always the same, with no occasion to exert understanding or exercise invention to remove difficulties which never occur, the worker becomes as stupid and ignorant as it is possible for a human creature to become). But perhaps getting into corporate power abuses and human issues would have been straying away from the narrow financial path of Piketty, and one can only cover so much in 577 pages of text and 77 pages of notes. To his credit, Piketty does point out the need for other social science disciplines to engage in the conversation and problem solving.

On the optimistic side, Piketty's solution may be patchwork for an obsolete and failing system (obsolete and failing for a growing majority of the people), but the patches would plug one of the biggest holes in the sinking ship and buy time for younger and future generations to repair the compass, make needed structural changes and set a new course. The older generation doesn't have enough folks that want to change anything, or ability and time remaining in their lives to do so. Most of the middle and upper class folks have assimilated and glommed onto niches in the existing system, lost their imagination if they ever had any, developed immunity to all new ideas, and with failing short-sighted vision they can't see outside their personal spheres. Besides, as a group, they've gotten it all wrong over the past forty years, or perhaps the past four hundred years, so there's little reason to expect very many of them to suddenly change their thinking and strike out in new directions. There are exceptions of course, but change and invention tend to be work best performed by the young.
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Andrew
5.0 out of 5 stars A Gold Mine
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on June 28, 2017
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This is a tremendous book! It is a great start to understanding the current state of our global economy. The central argument being for the global taxation of wealth to restore a world that is becoming less egalitarian by each decade. Piketty uses two equations, known as "The Fundamental Laws of Capitalism," and a girth of historical data to arrive at his point.

The equations are:

a = r * B where r = rate of return; B = the capital/income ratio; a = the share of income from capital in the economy

and

B = s/g where B = the capital/income ratio; s = the savings rate; g = growth rate of the economy

These two laws are inter-related. Equation 2, states that the lower the growth of the economy, the more power is exerted by inherited capital because via equation 1, it will generate a larger share of income in the economy. Growth in world output up until the 17th century was nonexistent. Therefore, throughout much of human history there were very rigid social class structures that prevented people from accumulating wealth over their life and in due process passing on a better life to their children. Piketty cites Jane Austen novels here as evidence that the central characters of her novel thought it more worthwhile to marry into wealth than to work for it, for no matter how hard one worked or in what sort of profession, it was impossible to generate the type of lifestyle the wealthy enjoyed.

The entire dynamic of wealth changed during 19th century at the advent of the industrial revolution. Suddenly, growth in world output went up to 1.5%. Society was more dynamic. Social class was more fluid. However, the structural forces that breed inequality in society did not change, for the nature of capital did not change. According to the author, over the long run, the capital/income ratio will continue to increase because capital can be reinvested and over time will generate a higher return than income.

On the eve of WWI, the value of capital/income in Europe and America was a hair under 7. This was the marking of a rare point in history. For the brief 30-year period of war and instability that followed, the value of capital did not increase faster than that of income. On the contrary, it shrank relative to income. It is as if an external shock restored a social equilibrium. The capital/income ratio reached a low point of a hair over 2 in the early 1950s. The baby boomers that followed were born into what might be considered the most equal society in the history of civilization. They were given a rare opportunity to truly live the “American Dream” and (now me talking) believe that they are entitled to everything they earned.

Unfortunately, their kids were not born into a similar opportunity. The capital/income ratio has steadily crept up since the 1950s and now stands at around 5.5 in Europe and 4.5 in the U.S. These statistics mask some of the already inegalitarian societies like Italy where the ratio is closer to 7. What is further the problem is that world output, which grew on average of 3% in the 20th century, is falling. The author does not believe that this trend will reverse because historically, about half of growth in world output is generated by the growth in population and the other half through actual progress in technology and productivity. With demographics set to shrink in the coming decades, it seems unlikely that we will be able to sustain the 3% growth in world output in the future.

Thomas Piketty’s solution is a global tax on capital. To purge society from systemic convergence toward inequality, you must eliminate the upper hand that capital affords to the beneficiaries of inherited wealth. I completely buy his argument here. The wealthy do have access to better wealth managers and investment vehicles that ordinary people like myself just do not. Ultimately however, what truly matters, and what is truly difficult to analyze, is whether society would be better off with such a tax. As the author states himself, half of the people in our country have zero savings. This relative proportion has been uniform throughout history. However, these same people today can live, materially speaking, much richer lives than the wealthy predecessors discussed in Jane Austen novels. The purchasing power parity has increased like seven-fold over the last few centuries, this all thanks to in great deal to the innovation and efficient allocation of resources over the past few years.

Perhaps this picture would have been different with a global tax on capital. It would have been interesting to see what Piketty’s thoughts would be on how this sort of tax would affect entrepreneurship, if the risk taker knew that as soon as they sold their business they would be met with a yearly tax on their wealth. I think the bigger question that is left unanswered in the book is who would ultimately receive the proceeds from such a tax and for what purpose would it be used? Would society be truly better off if the government could tax capital and spend more as opposed to the vast amount of institutional funds and PE shops which for the most part allocate capital on the behalf of the wealthy?

Regardless of whether you agree with the politics of the book, you should read it, if not for the data alone. The author poses a serious question in this book and provides a well thought out solutions. I might not be completely convinced of his thesis just yet, but I am much more knowledgeable about the the nature of capital/income split. This was a great and sobering starting point. Cheers!
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Roger M. Cooke
5.0 out of 5 stars PIketty's model - beyond stars
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on June 6, 2014
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This book deserves the praise it has garnered. I have some notes focusing on Pjiketty's "Model" :
"There is one great advantage to being an academic economist in France: here, economists are not highly respected in the academic and intellectual world or by political and financial elites. Hence they must set aside their contempt for other disciplines and their absurd claim to greater scientific legitimacy, despite the fact that they know almost nothing about anything." Piketty, Thomas (2014-03-10). Capital in the Twenty-First Century (p. 32). Harvard University Press. Kindle Edition.

"I define "national wealth" or "national capital" as the total market value of everything owned by the residents and government of a given country at a given point in time, provided that it can be traded on some market. It consists of the sum total of nonfinancial assets (land, dwellings , commercial inventory, other buildings, machinery, infrastructure, patents, and other directly owned professional assets) and financial assets (bank accounts, mutual funds, bonds, stocks, financial investments of all kinds, insurance policies, pension funds, etc.), less the total amount of financial liabilities (debt). If we look only at the assets and liabilities of private individuals, the result is private wealth or private capital. If we consider assets and liabilities held by the government and other governmental entities (such as towns, social insurance agencies, etc.), the result is public wealth or public capital. By definition , national wealth is the sum of these two terms: National wealth = private wealth + public wealth" Piketty, Thomas (2014-03-10). Capital in the Twenty-First Century (p. 48). Harvard University Press. Kindle Edition.

β = Kapital / Income = K / I; dimensions = [$/($/y)] = y.

In France and UK, β~ 5 or 6 years, in US β = 3 or 4 years.

Sometimes Piketty talks of α as % (??)

First Fundamental Law of Capitalism:
α = r × β; α = Share of income from capital in national income, r = rate of return on capital.
[α/r] = % / ($/(y$) ) ] = y. This is an "accounting identity", i.e. a definition α or r. Write I = IK+IL (income from capital + income from Labor);α= IK / (IK+ IL); then

r = α / β = (IK / I) / (K / I) = IK / K.

Second Fundamental Law of Capitalism
β = s / g; s = savings percentage, g = growth rate of national income (pp growth rate + pop growth rate).
* holds 'in the long run'
* s is net of capital depreciation,
* applies to capital that can cumulate.
* assumes asset prices evolve as consumer prices.
["annual capital depreciation in the developed economies is on the order of 10- 15 percent of national income and absorbs nearly half of total savings, which generally run around 25- 30 percent of national income, leaving net savings of 10- 15 percent of national income" Piketty, Thomas (2014-03-10). Capital in the Twenty-First Century (p. 178). Harvard University Press. Kindle Edition.]

WHY? (put K' := dK(t)/dt) :
I * s = K' & I = K/ β, implies s/ β = K' / K ?=? g. .

Piketty says that g is growth rate of Income. [I' / I].

Is K' / K = I' / I? and what means 'long run'?

if s' = 0: K'' = I' *s implies I' / I = K" / K' and K' / K = K" / K' ↔ K'^2 = K" * K ↔ (d/dt) (K'/K) = 0.

(Since (d/dt) (K'/K) = K"/K - K'2 / K2)

SO "long run" means constant growth rate of Kapital, which is then constant growth rate of Income (assuming s = constant)?

In the long run, α / r = s / g.

History of β:

"The interesting question is therefore not whether the marginal productivity of capital decreases when the stock of capital increases (this is obvious) but rather how fast it decreases. ... Two cases are possible. If the return on capital r falls more than proportionately when the capital/ income ratio β increases (for example, if r decreases by more than half when β is doubled), then the share of capital income in national income α = r × β decreases when β increases. .... Conversely, if the return r falls less than proportionately when β increases ..., then capital's share α = r × β increases when β increases. ... Based on historical evolutions observed in Britain and France, the second case seems more relevant over the long run: the capital share of income, α, follows the same U-shaped curve as the capital income ratio, β. ... It is nevertheless important to emphasize that both cases are theoretically possible. Everything depends on the vagaries of technology, or more precisely, everything depends on the range of technologies available to combine capital and labor to produce the various types of goods and services that society wants to consume. Piketty, Thomas (2014-03-10). Capital in the Twenty-First Century (p. 216). Harvard University Press. Kindle Edition.

Cobb Douglas says α = constant, but data says otherwise.

The basic cause is Tax Policy

The rich world is rich, but the governments of the rich world are poor. Europe is the most extreme case: it has both the highest level of private wealth in the world and the greatest difficulty in resolving its public debt crisis-- a strange paradox. Piketty, Thomas (2014-03-10). Capital in the Twenty-First Century (p. 540). Harvard University Press. Kindle Edition.

An exceptional tax on private capital is the most just and efficient solution. Failing that, inflation can play a useful role: historically, that is how most large public debts have been dealt with. The worst solution in terms of both justice and efficiency is a prolonged dose of austerity-- yet that is the course Europe is currently following. Piketty, Thomas (2014-03-10). Capital in the Twenty-First Century (p. 541). Harvard University Press. Kindle Edition.

YES, a primary function of government is to protect private property, so private property should be taxed. The rich like goverment debt - its better than them than taxes. Capital today is massively under-taxed.
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George N. Schmidt
5.0 out of 5 stars Piketty returns us to the study of political economy, and for that alone we owe this work thanks...
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on May 13, 2014
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I bought Thomas Piketty's Capital in the 21st Century when it was first announced, so I was able to spend the weeks necessary to really have read it (the first time through) while others were apparently bemoaning the fact that it was "sold out". Although I plan to go back and review each of the math formulas and try to learn them, I can honestly give this book five stars (and laugh at the New York Times Sunday cartoon about the one-star "reviews").

This review will not be summarizing Piketty's work, but rather help push forward an argument about why we need to resume the study of "political economy" and end the reign of madness and moronity that has characterized the Atlas Shrugged and William Simon generations. Piketty's been summarized very well elsewhere already, but there will be no substitution for serious readers for reading the Capital in the 21st Century.

We needed to return to the subject of "political economy," and this book brings us there out of the confusions of the past couple of decades. One of the great puzzles of the last 30 years in the USA (and some other places, but I know what's been going on here at home) is why "economics" -- actually, always "political economy" -- degenerated from the classical economists from Adam Smith, David Ricardo and Karl Marx to John Maynard Keynes and became mired in the mindless simplifications of Ayn Rand. It's as if everyone could get an "A" in the class by having read only a parody and the worst Cliffs Notes. But, as we say in the class struggle, c'est la guerre.

What became frightening by the end of the 20th Century was that the triumphalism of the Atlas Shrugged generation in the face of the (predictable) collapse of Soviet-style Communism blinded a generation of otherwise intelligent young people to the growing horrors being created by monopoly capitalism. We were living, basically, in the age of the oligarchs, from Larry Ellison and Bill Gates to those in Eastern Europe and Russia. But that was supposed to be OK because of all that nonsense about "freedom" and "market."

The result was that a generation of educated Americans has been crippled both intellectually and emotionally because their version of "history" has been so wrong. Piketty's ruthless use of the "data" of history from those nations where it is available helps overcome this, and it is heartening to see so much interest in Capital in the 21st Century. Ironically, though, what is left out of the book is as important as what's in it. Piketty has revived history that recognizes the existences of economic classes, something that no one would have denied for generations, even at my Alma Mater (the University of Chicago).

Those who read the "classics" knew that Adam Smith's world demanded the existence of a morality based government and society -- Scotch Presbyterianism to be precise. The European contribution to the modern theories of "economics" also required something even more ruthless -- Calvin's theocracy in Geneva. Nobody who praised and analyzed capitalism as it was pulling human beings out of the mires of the Catholic theocracies would have posited the mindless materialism of Atlas Shrugged.

So... Piketty has brought us back to reality by describing in almost mind-numbing detail the process whereby a ruling class accumulates wealth, and thereby the power that comes with wealth. He is in one way writing a description of the founding and perpetuation of the oligarchies we face across the planet today.

And that partly in the tradition of Karl Marx, although Piketty says, and proves, that he is not a "Marxist" -- either in the good or bad sense. Karl Marx and his closest co-workers (but not the disciples he dreaded) wrote eloquently about the creation and development of both the capitalist class -- which he calls the bourgeoisie -- as a class and or the working class -- what he called the proletariat -- as a class. For the most part, Piketty is writing about the creation and prolongation of the current capitalist class.

To read and master the description of the capitalist class and its regime in the 21st Century is worth the effort. And given that Piketty makes his dense analysis a bit more accessible by citing some literary works (Jane Austin and Honore de Balzac mostly) that depict the "middle class", it's worth noting that we are now confronted with developing the literature that describes the working class(es) as well as Victor Hugo, Emile Zola, and the early John Steinbeck and Richard Wright and others described the contradictions of the working class.

So, our work in the wake of Capitalism in the 21st Century is not only to master the arguments Piketty has brought into the debate, but also to see where to extend beyond them. His integration of literature into political economy certainly helps. But just as the publication of its predecessors (and it has a few, from Wealth of Nations to Kapital) demanded years of study, so this work will and does. I for one can't wait to read the next months of anti-Piketty writings that spew out from now on. To enjoy some of this we might conclude, "A specter is haunting the 'global economy, the specter of rational thinking about wealth, power, and society... Capitalism in the 21st Century is a major contribution to that..."

And one last nice touch, for those of us who read Kapital years ago and perhaps re-read parts of it since. I don't think Marx (or Engels) would have objected to having someone suggest that Marx's greatest (certainly not only) work was really "Kapital in the 19th Century." Who knows. Maybe some of the Ayn Rand cultists can conjure up an answer to that, too, since their Where Is John Galt mumbo jumbo has given them so much insight into the ways things were, are, and ought to be...
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