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  • Does the structure of capitalism eliminate inequalityor reinforce it?

  • That is the question at the heart of Capital in the Twenty-First Century,

  • by the French economist, Thomas Piketty. One of the most discussed academic books published

  • since the turn of the century, it analyses the role that capitalism plays in global inequality.

  • For years most economists have believed that capitalism reduces inequality between the

  • richest and poorestin the long run. For example, the Kuznets Curve hypothesis suggested

  • that inequality rises when countries industrialisebut then falls.

  • Piketty disagrees.

  • He claims that capitalism creates greater economic inequality.

  • The Kuznets Curve was constructed using data relating to wealth and income collected from

  • the late 19th to the early 20th century. But Piketty benefitted from a whole century of

  • extra dataright into the early 21st century. Using this wider pool of figures, Piketty

  • does two things. He argues that Kuznets’s data is misleading, because it was drawn from

  • what turns out to be a very unusual period of history. And he creates a theory he calls

  • thecentral contradiction of capitalism’.

  • So what is thiscentral contradiction of capitalism’?

  • Throughout history, the annual rate of return on capitalwhich means the profits or

  • the interest you earn from investing your moneyusually exceeds the annual growth

  • rate of the overall economy. Return on capital (or ‘r’) has remained relatively constant

  • at around 5% - despite radical changes in who controls the capitalit’s generally

  • the rich and individuals who inherit itand whether it’s held as gold, bonds, land or

  • in an investment portfolio.

  • In contrast to this, the annual growth of an economy (or ‘g’) has almost always

  • remained close to zero (it has only, in the last two centuries, reached a level of 1-2%).

  • There’s not muchshort of revolutionthat those individuals who rely solely

  • on labour to earn a living can do to change it.

  • Let me introduce Jane and Joe.

  • They both earn $100,000 a year. But Jane also has a $10million inheritance which she invests

  • annually in the stock market, earning a yearly return of 5%. Joe has no savings.

  • Let’s see how their incomes evolve.

  • Both Jane and Joe spend all of their annual salaries. After a year, Joe will have nothing

  • left over whereas Jane will have made $500,000 from her investments, which she reinvests.

  • Fast forward ten years

  • Joe’s total wealth has grown very littleit depends on whether he is able to negotiate

  • a raise butraise or no raiseJane’s $10million has now grown to be worth more

  • than $16milliondemonstrating Piketty’s argument that the difference in interest between

  • ‘r’ and ‘g’ can lead to widening inequality over time. To avoid this, he proposes a global

  • tax on wealth that would effectively lower the rate of return on capital.

  • A more detailed examination can be found in the MACAT analysis.

Does the structure of capitalism eliminate inequalityor reinforce it?

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