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xchrom

(108,903 posts)
Sun Apr 27, 2014, 10:30 AM Apr 2014

Can Thomas Piketty Re-Write the American Dream?

https://www.commondreams.org/view/2014/04/27


Piketty's immaculate research establishes that the American dream – and more broadly, the egalitarian promise of Western-style capitalism – does not, and maybe cannot, deliver on its promises. Photo: Ed Alcock for the Observer

When the movie is made about the fall of Western capitalism, Thomas Piketty will be played by Colin Firth. Piketty, whom the Financial Times called a "rock-star economist", isn't a household name – but he should be, and he has a better shot than any other economist. He is the author and researcher behind a 700-page economic manifesto, titled Capital in the 21st Century, that details the path of income inequality over several hundred years.

This sublime nerdishness is, somehow, a huge hit. It is now No 1 on Amazon's bestseller list and sold out in many bookstores. When Piketty spoke on a panel this month at New York's CUNY with three other economists – two of them Nobel-prize winners, Joseph Stiglitz and Paul Krugman – the Frenchman was the headliner. The event was so packed that the organizers had to create three overflow rooms. Weeks after the release of Capital, intellectuals are still salivating, even calling Piketty the new de Tocqueville.

This is quite a burst of stardom for a man who, despite his understated Gallic charm, is very much the bearer of bad news. Piketty's sublimely nerdy book, packed with graphs, statistics and history, is all evidence for an immensely depressing theory: that the meritocracy of capitalism is a big, fat lie.

Piketty's research, which is immaculate, reaches back hundreds of years to establish a simple thesis: the American dream – and more broadly, the egalitarian promise of Western-style capitalism – does not, and maybe cannot, deliver on its promises. That, he writes, is because economic growth will always be smaller than the profits from any money that is invested. Economic growth is what we all benefit from, but profits from invested money accrue only to the rich.
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Can Thomas Piketty Re-Write the American Dream? (Original Post) xchrom Apr 2014 OP
K&R...Thanks for posting red dog 1 Apr 2014 #1
... xchrom Apr 2014 #2

red dog 1

(27,804 posts)
1. K&R...Thanks for posting
Tue Apr 29, 2014, 03:32 PM
Apr 2014

I wonder what Paul Krugman thinks of Piketty's economic theories?

"Thomas Piketty's Capital: Everything You Need To Know About the Surprise best Seller"
http://www.theguardian.com/books/2014/apr/28/thomas-piketty-capital-surprise-bestseller/

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