(See 
http://www.nytimes.com/2014/03/12/business/economy/a-relentless-rise-in-unequal-wealth.html
 
for accompanying graphs.)

NY Times, Mar. 12 2014
A Relentless Widening of Disparity in Wealth
by Eduardo Porter

What if inequality were to continue growing years or decades into the 
future? Say the richest 1 percent of the population amassed a quarter of 
the nation’s income, up from about a fifth today. What about half?

To believe Thomas Piketty of the Paris School of Economics, this future 
is not just possible. It is likely.

In his bracing “Capital in the Twenty-First Century,” which hit 
bookstores on Monday, Professor Piketty provides a fresh and sweeping 
analysis of the world’s economic history that puts into question many of 
our core beliefs about the organization of market economies.

His most startling news is that the belief that inequality will 
eventually stabilize and subside on its own, a long-held tenet of free 
market capitalism, is wrong. Rather, the economic forces concentrating 
more and more wealth into the hands of the fortunate few are almost sure 
to prevail for a very long time.

It is possible to slow, or even reverse, the trend, if political leaders 
like President Obama, who proposed that income inequality was the 
“defining challenge of our time,” really push.

“Political action can make this go in the other direction,” Professor 
Piketty told me. But he also adds that history does not offer much hope 
that political action will, in fact, turn the tide: “Universal suffrage 
and democratic institutions have not been enough to make the system react.”

Professor Piketty’s description of inexorably rising inequality probably 
fits many Americans’ intuitive understanding of how the world works 
today. But it cuts hard against the grain of economic orthodoxy that 
prevailed throughout the second half of the 20th century and still holds 
sway today. It was shaped during the early years of the Cold War by the 
Belorussian-born American economist Simon Kuznets.

Painstakingly assembling data from tax returns, Mr. Kuznets estimated 
that between 1913, when the income tax was first introduced in the 
United States, and shortly after the end of World War II in 1948, the 
slice of the nation’s income absorbed by the richest 10 percent of 
Americans declined sharply, to about a third, from a little under half.
Continue reading the main story
Irresistible Inequality

The concentration of income and wealth is deepening around the world, 
driven by more than rising paychecks for top American financiers and 
chief executives. Returns to invested capital are outstripping economic 
growth across advanced countries, directing a growing share of economic 
rewards into the hands of the wealthy.

In his presidential address at the annual meeting of the American 
Economic Association in Detroit in 1954, he sketched out what came to be 
known as inequality’s “Kuznets curve”: “Widening in the early phases of 
economic growth when the transition from the preindustrial to the 
industrial civilization was most rapid; becoming stabilized for a while; 
and then narrowing in the later phases.”

Mr. Kuznets’s conclusion provided a huge moral lift to capitalism as the 
United States faced off with the Soviet Union. It suggested that the 
market economy could distribute its fruits equitably, without any 
heavy-handed intervention of the state.

And it more or less put an end to economists’ interest in the topic. 
Economic theorists assumed that in a balanced economy, wages and profits 
rose at the same pace and turned their attention to the ups and downs of 
the business cycle.

The deep concern about the distribution of income and wealth that 
inspired 19th-century thinkers like David Ricardo and Karl Marx was 
attributed to a misunderstanding of the dynamics of growth leavened with 
the natural pessimism that would come from living in a time of enormous 
wealth and deep squalor, an era that gave us “Les Misérables” and 
“Oliver Twist.”

Today, of course, it’s far from obvious that the 19th-century pessimists 
were entirely wrong.

Glancing back across history from the present-day United States, it 
looks as if Kuznets’s curve swerved way off target. Wages have been 
depressed for years. Profits account for the largest share of national 
income since the 1930s. The richest 10 percent of Americans take a 
larger slice of the economic pie than they did in 1913, at the peak of 
the Gilded Age.

This is not solely an American phenomenon. Across many other developed 
nations, the distribution of economic rewards in the 21st century is 
taking on decidedly 19th-century features.

In “Capital in the Twenty-First Century,” Professor Piketty offers a 
general theory of capitalism that returns distribution to the center of 
the analysis. Branko Milanovic, an expert on the global distribution of 
income at the City University of New York’s Graduate Center, called it 
“one of the watershed books in economic thinking.”

Like Kuznets’s analysis, Mr. Piketty’s is based on data. He just has 
much more: centuries’ worth, from dozens of countries. He distills from 
them a simple historical regularity. The rate of return to capital — 
understood broadly to include machinery, land, financial instruments, 
housing and everything else — is usually higher than economic growth.

This was particularly true before the Industrial Revolution, when 
economies didn’t really grow, but it prevailed even after economic 
growth took off in the 19th century.

This means that the income from wealth usually grows faster than wages. 
As returns from capital are reinvested, inherited wealth will grow 
faster than the economy, concentrating more and more into the hands of 
few. This will go on until capital owners decide to consume most of 
their income and stop reinvesting as much.

Kuznets’s misleading curve is easy to understand in this light. He used 
data from one exceptional period in history, when a depression, two 
world wars and high inflation destroyed a large chunk of the world’s 
capital stock. Combined with fast growth after World War II and high 
taxes on the rich, this flattened the distribution of income until the 
1970s.

But this exceptional period long ago ran its course.

During the Gilded Age — a period of enormous concentration of income and 
wealth — the stock of the world’s privately held capital amounted to 
some five years’ worth of global income, by Professor Piketty’s 
estimate. By 1950, it had fallen to below three, but by 2010, it was 
back at four. And by the end of this century, Mr. Piketty projects, it 
will amount to almost seven.

Americans will argue that this description does not fit the United 
States. Wealth here is largely earned, not inherited, we say. The 
American rich are “creators,” like Bill Gates of Microsoft or Lloyd 
Blankfein of Goldman Sachs, rewarded for their economic contributions to 
society.

Mr. Piketty doubts that the enormous remuneration of top executives and 
financiers in the United States — enhanced by the decline of top income 
tax rates since the 1980s — really reflects their contributions. What’s 
more, he points out, inherited inequality has been lower in the United 
States mainly because its population has grown so fast — from three 
million at the time of independence to 300 million today — driving a 
vast economic expansion.

But this population boom will not repeat itself. The share of national 
income absorbed by corporate profits, a major component of capital’s 
share, is already rising sharply.

If anything, this means future inequality in the United States will be 
driven by two forces. A growing share of national income will go to the 
owners of capital. Of the remaining labor income, a growing share will 
also go to the top executives and highly compensated stars at the 
pinnacle of the earnings scale.

Is there a politically feasible antidote? Professor Piketty notes that 
the standard recipe — education for all — is no match against the 
powerful forces driving inherited wealth ever higher.

Taxes are, of course, the most feasible counterweight. Progressive 
wealth taxes could reduce the after-tax return to capital so that it 
equaled the rate of economic growth.

But politically, “the fiscal institutions to redistribute incomes in a 
balanced and equitable way have been badly damaged,” Professor Piketty 
told me.

The holders of wealth, hardly a powerless bunch, will oppose any such 
move, even if that’s what is needed to preserve capitalism against the 
populist impulses of those left behind.

Professor Piketty offers early-20th-century France as an example. 
“France was a democracy and yet the system did not respond to an 
incredible concentration of wealth and an incredible level of 
inequality,” he said. “The elites just refused to see it. They kept 
claiming that the free market was going to solve everything.”

It didn’t.
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