Reviewed By Paul Krugman
The New York Review of Books - May 8, 2014
Issue Capital in the Twenty-First Century by Thomas Piketty, translated from the French by Arthur Goldhammer Belknap Press/Harvard University Press, 685 pp.
Thomas Piketty, professor at the Paris School of Economics, isn’t a
household name, although that may change with the English-language
publication of his magnificent, sweeping meditation on inequality, Capital in the Twenty-First Century.
Yet his influence runs deep. It has become a commonplace to say that we
are living in a second Gilded Age—or, as Piketty likes to put it, a
second Belle Époque—defined by the incredible rise of the “one percent.”
But it has only become a commonplace thanks to Piketty’s work. In
particular, he and a few colleagues (notably Anthony Atkinson at Oxford
and Emmanuel Saez at Berkeley) have pioneered statistical techniques
that make it possible to track the concentration of income and wealth
deep into the past—back to the early twentieth century for America and
Britain, and all the way to the late eighteenth century for France.
The
result has been a revolution in our understanding of long-term trends
in inequality. Before this revolution, most discussions of economic
disparity more or less ignored the very rich. Some economists (not to
mention politicians) tried to shout down any mention of inequality at
all: “Of the tendencies that are harmful to sound economics, the most
seductive, and in my opinion the most poisonous, is to focus on
questions of distribution,” declared Robert Lucas Jr. of the University
of Chicago, the most influential macroeconomist of his generation, in
2004. But even those willing to discuss inequality generally focused on
the gap between the poor or the working class and the merely well-off,
not the truly rich—on college graduates whose wage gains outpaced those
of less-educated workers, or on the comparative good fortune of the top
fifth of the population compared with the bottom four fifths, not on the
rapidly rising incomes of executives and bankers.
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