The new Gilded Age

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Krugman reviews the new Thomas Piketty book, Capital in the Twenty-First Century. It’s making quite the stir among the talking classes:

It therefore came as a revelation when Piketty and his colleagues showed that incomes of the now famous “one percent,” and of even narrower groups, are actually the big story in rising inequality. And this discovery came with a second revelation: talk of a second Gilded Age, which might have seemed like hyperbole, was nothing of the kind. In America in particular the share of national income going to the top one percent has followed a great U-shaped arc. Before World War I the one percent received around a fifth of total income in both Britain and the United States. By 1950 that share had been cut by more than half. But since 1980 the one percent has seen its income share surge again—and in the United States it’s back to what it was a century ago.

Still, today’s economic elite is very different from that of the nineteenth century, isn’t it? Back then, great wealth tended to be inherited; aren’t today’s economic elite people who earned their position? Well, Piketty tells us that this isn’t as true as you think, and that in any case this state of affairs may prove no more durable than the middle-class society that flourished for a generation after World War II. The big idea of Capital in the Twenty-First Century is that we haven’t just gone back to nineteenth-century levels of income inequality, we’re also on a path back to “patrimonial capitalism,” in which the commanding heights of the economy are controlled not by talented individuals but by family dynasties.

It’s a remarkable claim—and precisely because it’s so remarkable, it needs to be examined carefully and critically. Before I get into that, however, let me say right away that Piketty has written a truly superb book. It’s a work that melds grand historical sweep—when was the last time you heard an economist invoke Jane Austen and Balzac?—with painstaking data analysis. And even though Piketty mocks the economics profession for its “childish passion for mathematics,” underlying his discussion is a tour de force of economic modeling, an approach that integrates the analysis of economic growth with that of the distribution of income and wealth. This is a book that will change both the way we think about society and the way we do economics.

[…] Piketty ends Capital in the Twenty-First Century with a call to arms—a call, in particular, for wealth taxes, global if possible, to restrain the growing power of inherited wealth. It’s easy to be cynical about the prospects for anything of the kind. But surely Piketty’s masterly diagnosis of where we are and where we’re heading makes such a thing considerably more likely. So Capital in the Twenty-First Century is an extremely important book on all fronts. Piketty has transformed our economic discourse; we’ll never talk about wealth and inequality the same way we used to.

Who is this “we,” white man? Seems to me that Thomas Piketty has merely validated what we’ve already been saying.

One thought on “The new Gilded Age

  1. When they stopped organizing industry to create wealth, the only way the oligarchs could continue getting richer was by extracting existing wealth accumulated in our national infrastructure (closing down and selling off industrial plant and public institutions) and sucking u the accumulated savings of ordinary workers by means of interest, fees, penalties, raiding pension funds and foreclosing houses.

    That is, they are of “fracking”, the working class sucking out the last dregs of wealth. They are pumping wealth out of our reservoir into their reservoir as the drought dries us up. Soon they will be safe with plenty as we die of hunger and thirst. Meanwhile Wall Street is the most heavily policed and secure plot of land in the USA.

    If you believe in such a thing I think the only hope left is the Judgement of God. Maybe that is what Global Warming is all about,

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