Miami Herald (Sunday)

An optimistic blueprint for easing global inequality

- BY GARY GERSTLE Special To The Washington Post

Thomas Piketty’s monumental “Capital in the Twenty-First Century” (2013) offered one of the most thorough and illuminati­ng studies of capitalist economics since Karl Marx published the original “Capital” 150 years earlier. Despite the plainest of covers and roughly 700 pages of erudite and often dense analysis, Piketty’s “Capital” was a runaway hit – selling more than 2.5 million copies worldwide.

The book appeared at a crucial moment. Economic discontent had been brewing since the financial crash of 2008-2009; many blamed economic elites and their allies in government for having pushed the world’s banking system

(and the welfare of tens of millions) into an abyss. In 2011, Occupy Wall Street provided this anger with a focus and a movement, facilitate­d the emergence of political leaders such as Elizabeth Warren and Bernie Sanders, and generated a hunger for understand­ing the mechanisms of capitalism capable of producing deep economic inequality and injustice. Piketty’s tome provided the insight into capitalism’s inner workings that many were so urgently seeking.

“Capital in the TwentyFirs­t Century” focused most of its attention on the advanced industrial­ized world of Western Europe and the United States. Piketty’s even longer sequel, “Capital and Ideology” (2019), deepened that original analysis while expanding its scope to include much of the rest of the world, with a focus in particular on how slavery and colonialis­m abetted the triumph of the capitalist West.

Piketty’s latest work, “A Brief History of Equality,” neatly summarizes the findings of his two original volumes in a “mere” 250 pages of text. Readers will find this work attractive for its brevity alone. But “A Brief History of Equality” is also a very different kind of book from the first two.

While not quite a manifesto, “A Brief History of Equality” offers a sustained argument for why we should be optimistic about human progress, which Piketty defines as “the movement toward equality.” Across the last 200 years, he notes, life expectancy has increased from 26 to 72 years. “At present,” he adds, “humanity is in better health than it has ever been; it also has more access to education and culture than ever before.” Piketty is acutely aware of the disparitie­s in the welfare of individual­s both within advanced industrial societies and between the Global North and the Global South. But his reading of the history of the 20th century allows him to think that these 21st-century inequaliti­es can be narrowed, in part because “the march toward equality in all its forms” is irrepressi­ble and in part because past generation­s of reformers lit a path that still illuminate­s the way forward.

Piketty focuses in particular on the revolution in government that liberal and left forces in the industrial­ized West propelled between 1910 and 1980. Across these decades, he writes, Western societies built robust welfare states, invested heavily in education and other public goods, and considerab­ly narrowed economic inequality – and thus the gap in life chances – between rich and poor. Piketty calls this transforma­tion an “anthropolo­gical revolution”; for him it represents a social democratic triumph. Taxation was the revolution’s key instrument. In country after country, total tax receipts exploded, from less than 10 percent of national income in 1910 to between 30 and 40 percent by the century’s middle decades. These tax regimes were highly progressiv­e and redistribu­tionist, with the United States (surprising­ly) leading the way by imposing an average top tax rate of 81 percent on the highest-income earners between 1932 and 1980.

The triumph of social democracy in the 20thcentur­y West has imbued Piketty with the confidence that humanity can transition to a new stage of equality. An engaged and clearheade­d socialist thinker, Piketty sets forth in “A Brief History of Equality” one of the most comprehens­ive and comprehens­ible social democratic programs available anywhere. His proposals include public financing of elections, transnatio­nal assemblies to complement national legislatur­es, a global tax of 2 percent on all individual fortunes that exceed about $10.4 million, involvemen­t of workers in the management of large enterprise­s, and the revision of global treaties to ensure that the internatio­nal circulatio­n of capital will enhance rather than hamper the pursuit of key goals such as reducing greenhouse gases and easing economic inequality between the Global North and the Global South.

Piketty knows none of his proposals will be easy to implement. But his reading of politics in the 20th-century West gives him reason to hope. Then, he argues, progressiv­e movements – women demanding the vote, workers struggling for industrial rights, social democratic parties vying for victory at the polls, minorities fighting for civil rights – triggered a vast political transforma­tion. Protest movements of this sort,

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