cancel2 2022
Canceled
If you haven't read anything about him or by him you do not have the slightest idea do you? Trust me Piketty's academic and internationally recognized accomplishments are already far superior to anything you will ever accomplish. He has also established two websites on income inequality historically and world widel It's the first time in history that such information has been accumulated and made available to a vast international audience of academics and people like yourself whose fear of facts will prevent them from actually looking at the information he and his colleagues have assembled over the past twelve years. The fact that you are so quick to dismiss him without even reading Krugman's review shows just how closed minded and infantile you really are mediocre man. Your intellect is so frightened by opposing ideas that you can't even read about them.
You might fool some here but you have never fooled me or Darla because as she said on another thread to 3D she is one of the two or three brightest people on this board and you certainly are not. It's not that you don't have a mind, it's just that you keep it imprisoned and feed it bread and water in the hopes that it never causes you any discomfort by actually beginning to disrupt the foundations on which your thousands of preconceived notions of how the world works are based. I can attest to two things, Darla is getting this book as soon as it available again, it is sold out right now. I was aware of it before it came out and I pre-ordered it and have already started it, and it is a fantastic book, that even Krugman's review doesn't do justice to, but he comes close. Piketty's method is masterful (the book has nearly 100 graphs based on the information be has accumulated) and his underlying data is far more extensive and accurate than anything you have at your disposal and he uses it to make an argument that you probably can't even grasp or get your head around. Sorry, mediocre man those are the facts!
But dismiss Piketty, who has already done more solid work than you will ever do, and his exemplary work here, because you don't like the topic! That's real smart! Such action brilliantly demonstrates the vast depth and breadth of your intellect!
The Hollande government in France took his advice about raising taxes and there has been a mass exodus of the wealthy, many of them to London. The elitist Left have taken Piketty to their hearts as he appears to be the new Marx, it's just a pity that it is Groucho and not Karl!
Thomas Piketty's Capital in the Twenty-First Century, a modern version of 'Das Kapital’, calls for a global wealth tax, and ignores some obvious truths
For many on the Left, François Hollande’s drubbing in local elections is not about policy failure, but weak political leadership. It’s the man, not what he was trying to achieve, that is wrong. This makes for a nice line in fantasy, but the reality is that the Hollande policy agenda has been a disaster for France, with a growing exodus of the rich and talented, rising unemployment, and a sense of lost national pride and self-confidence reminiscent of Britain in the Seventies.
How apposite, then, that the humbling of Hollande’s government should coincide with the English translation of a book that provides a kind of reinvented intellectual justification for Left-of-centre thinking, and, according to the author, the “evidence” of growing inequality to back it up. Billed as one of the most keenly awaited economic texts of the post-crisis era, Capital in the Twenty-First Century is the work of a French political activist and economist called Thomas Piketty. As its name implies, it is a kind of updated Das Kapital, but without the revolutionary call to arms. None the less, its economics are not so dissimilar to the Marxist original.
Most economists, when analysing inequality, focus on income disparities, and the way these entrench social divides across generations. Piketty’s big new insight is to demonstrate pretty convincingly, assuming he’s not cocked up the data, a not-infrequent occurrence among economists that capital accumulation is growing at a much faster pace in advanced economies than output and wages. Pools of wealth are getting bigger as earnings stagnate. Labour is taking a decreasing share of the pie, capital a growing one. Neo-liberal assumptions that economic growth “lifts all boats” have been proved wrong, Professor Piketty argues. Increasingly, it is just the yachts. If current trends continue, “the consequences for the long-term dynamics of wealth distribution are potentially terrifying”.
Yet if all this is true, how come, as François Hollande has demonstrated anew, traditional Left-wing solutions still gain so little traction? Even where the popular mandate for such actions exists, it quickly dissipates in the impoverishing consequences of implementation.
Capital is undoubtedly an important book, which contains some genuinely groundbreaking new research. Yet there is also a lot which Prof Piketty skirts around or ignores in this supposed exposé of the “contradictions” at the heart of modern capitalism.
The most obvious of these omissions lies in the very nature of wealth and income disparity, which tends to be much more granular and transitory over time than he suggests. The difference between the top and the bottom is undoubtedly widening, but the idea that people are permanently divided into and trapped in various income and wealth groups is a statistical illusion.
In fact, the earnings power of the vast majority of people will move up and down during their lifetimes. Someone just out of school or college is likely to be a low earner, but by middle age can reasonably aspire to be at least in the top half of earners. By the same token, relatively few people manage to be in the top 10 per cent, let alone the top 1 per cent, for anywhere near their entire working life.
The same is true of wealth. Younger workers tend to have no wealth, those approaching retirement at least some wealth. Nor are wealth differentials entirely a social and age-related phenomenon. Londoners are likely to be a great deal richer than their counterparts in, say, the North East, if only because house prices down south have risen so much more strongly.
As for bigger, inherited fortunes, these tend to be largely blown and therefore recycled within two or three generations. The wealth accumulated by the 19th-century American railroad mogul Cornelius Vanderbilt would have put today’s Russian oligarchs to shame. He was worth tens of billions in today’s money. His son managed to double it again, but by the late 1940s, it had all gone, squandered or otherwise lost. Exceptions to this rule, such as the Duke of Westminster’s Grosvenor Estate, are rare.
None of this is to deny the grinding and inescapable reality of poverty for those at the bottom of the pile, or the sometimes undeserved privilege of those at the top. But the idea that the difference between, say, a $1-a-day Indian peasant and the billionaires of Mumbai is explained by “market forces” is simply laughable; in this and most other cases, it is bad and corrupt government that keeps the masses in poverty. As for the West, we live in a world where the incentive to save and accumulate among low earners, and even some high earners, has been almost entirely removed by the safety net of welfare.
Low interest rates, actively pursued by governments through quantitative easing, have both prevented the wealth destruction you would expect after the implosion of the credit crunch, and turbocharged many asset prices, thereby greatly increasing the wealth divide. How is this the result of “market forces”?
Inevitably, I suppose, Professor Piketty proposes more taxes, and in particular, a globally imposed wealth tax. Good luck with that one. There is more chance of international agreement to bomb the Parthenon than there is of a global wealth tax. Come (Swiss: CADN.SW - news) to think of it, hasn’t President Hollande already tried wealth taxes? Why, yes, he has, and highly effective it has proved in making France a great deal poorer.
https://uk.finance.yahoo.com/news/don-t-blame-wealth-gap-064022670.html
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