http://billmoyers.com/ has Paul Krugman discussing Thomas Piketty's Capital in 
the twenty-First Century. 

Introduction: 


The median pay for the top 100 highest-paid CEOs at America’s publicly traded 
companies was a handsome $13.9 million in 2013. That’s a 9 percent increase 
from the previous year, according to a new Equilar pay study for The New York 
Times . 

These types of jumps in executive compensation may have more of an effect on 
our widening income inequality than previously thought. A new book that’s the 
talk of academia and the media, Capital in the Twenty-First Century by Thomas 
Piketty, a 42-year-old who teaches at the Paris School of Economics, shows that 
two-thirds of America’s increase in income inequality over the past four 
decades is the result of steep raises given to the country’s highest earners. 

This week, Bill talks with Nobel Prize-winning economist and New York Times 
columnist Paul Krugman, about Piketty’s “magnificent” new book. 

“What Piketty’s really done now is he said, ‘Even those of you who talk about 
the 1 percent, you don’t really get what’s going on.’ He’s telling us that we 
are on the road not just to a highly unequal society, but to a society of an 
oligarchy. A society of inherited wealth.” 

Krugman adds: “We’re seeing inequalities that will be transferred across 
generations. We are becoming very much the kind of society we imagined we’re 
nothing like.” 


-- 


Ron 




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