Read Capital in the Twenty-First Century Online
Authors: Thomas Piketty
The Progressive Tax in the Twentieth Century: An Ephemeral Product of Chaos
The Progressive Tax in the Third Republic
Confiscatory Taxation of Excessive Incomes: An American Invention
The Explosion of Executive Salaries: The Role of Taxation
Rethinking the Question of the Top Marginal Rate
A Global Tax on Capital: A Useful Utopia
Democratic and Financial Transparency
A Simple Solution: Automatic Transmission of Banking Information
What Is the Purpose of a Tax on Capital?
A Blueprint for a European Wealth Tax
Capital Taxation in Historical Perspective
Alternative Forms of Regulation: Protectionism and Capital Controls
The Mystery of Chinese Capital Regulation
The Redistribution of Petroleum Rents
Redistribution through Immigration
16.
The Question of the Public Debt
Reducing Public Debt: Tax on Capital, Inflation, and Austerity
Does Inflation Redistribute Wealth?
The Cyprus Crisis: When the Capital Tax and Banking Regulation Come Together
The Euro: A Stateless Currency for the Twenty-First Century?
The Question of European Unification
Government and Capital Accumulation in the Twenty-First Century
Climate Change and Public Capital
Economic Transparency and Democratic Control of Capital
The Central Contradiction of Capitalism:
r
>
g
For a Political and Historical Economics
The Interests of the Least Well-Off
List of Tables and Illustrations
Tables
Table 1.1.
Distribution of world GDP, 2012
Table 2.1.
World growth since the Industrial Revolution
Table 2.2.
The law of cumulated growth
Table 2.3.
Demographic growth since the Industrial Revolution
Table 2.4.
Employment by sector in France and the United States, 1800–2012
Table 2.5.
Per capita output growth since the Industrial Revolution
Table 3.1.
Public wealth and private wealth in France in 2012
Table 5.1.
Growth rates and saving rates in rich countries, 1970–2010
Table 5.2.
Private saving in rich countries, 1970–2010
Table 5.3.
Gross and net saving in rich countries, 1970–2010
Table 5.4.
Private and public saving in rich countries, 1970–2010
Table 7.1.
Inequality of labor income across time and space
Table 7.2.
Inequality of capital ownership across time and space
Table 7.3.
Inequality of total income (labor and capital) across time and space
Table 10.1.
The composition of Parisian portfolios, 1872–1912
Table 11.1.
The age-wealth profile in France, 1820–2010
Table 12.1.
The growth rate of top global wealth, 1987–2013
Table 12.2.
The return on the capital endowments of US universities, 1980–2010
Illustrations
Figure I.1.
Income inequality in the United States, 1910–2010
Figure I.2.
The capital/income ratio in Europe, 1870–2010
Figure 1.1.
The distribution of world output, 1700–2012
Figure 1.2.
The distribution of world population, 1700–2012
Figure 1.3.
Global inequality 1700–2012: divergence then convergence?
Figure 1.4.
Exchange rate and purchasing power parity: euro/dollar
Figure 1.5.
Exchange rate and purchasing power parity: euro/yuan
Figure 2.1.
The growth of world population, 1700–2012
Figure 2.2.
The growth rate of world population from Antiquity to 2100
Figure 2.3.
The growth rate of per capita output since the Industrial Revolution
Figure 2.4.
The growth rate of world per capita output from Antiquity to 2100
Figure 2.5.
The growth rate of world output from Antiquity to 2100
Figure 2.6.
Inflation since the Industrial Revolution
Figure 3.1.
Capital in Britain, 1700–2010
Figure 3.2.
Capital in France, 1700–2010
Figure 3.3.
Public wealth in Britain, 1700–2010
Figure 3.4.
Public wealth in France, 1700–2010
Figure 3.5.
Private and public capital in Britain, 1700–2010
Figure 3.6.
Private and public capital in France, 1700–2010
Figure 4.1.
Capital in Germany, 1870–2010
Figure 4.2.
Public wealth in Germany, 1870–2010
Figure 4.3.
Private and public capital in Germany, 1870–2010
Figure 4.4.
Private and public capital in Europe, 1870–2010
Figure 4.5.
National capital in Europe, 1870–2010
Figure 4.6.
Capital in the United States, 1770–2010
Figure 4.7.
Public wealth in the United States, 1770–2010
Figure 4.8.
Private and public capital in the United States, 1770–2010
Figure 4.9.
Capital in Canada, 1860–2010
Figure 4.10.
Capital and slavery in the United States
Figure 4.11.
Capital around 1770–1810: Old and New World
Figure 5.1.
Private and public capital: Europe and America, 1870–2010
Figure 5.2.
National capital in Europe and America, 1870–2010
Figure 5.3.
Private capital in rich countries, 1970–2010
Figure 5.4.
Private capital measured in years of disposable income
Figure 5.5.
Private and public capital in rich countries, 1970–2010
Figure 5.6.
Market value and book value of corporations
Figure 5.7.
National capital in rich countries, 1970–2010
Figure 5.8.
The world capital/income ratio, 1870–2100
Figure 6.1.
The capital-labor split in Britain, 1770–2010
Figure 6.2.
The capital-labor split in France, 1820–2010
Figure 6.3.
The pure rate of return on capital in Britain, 1770–2010
Figure 6.4.
The pure rate of return on capital in France, 1820–2010
Figure 6.5.
The capital share in rich countries, 1975–2010
Figure 6.6.
The profit share in the value added of corporations in France, 1900–2010
Figure 6.7.
The share of housing rent in national income in France, 1900–2010
Figure 6.8.
The capital share in national income in France, 1900–2010
Figure 8.1.
Income inequality in France, 1910–2010
Figure 8.2.
The fall of rentiers in France, 1910–2010
Figure 8.3.
The composition of top incomes in France in 1932
Figure 8.4.
The composition of top incomes in France in 2005
Figure 8.5.
Income inequality in the United States, 1910–2010
Figure 8.6.
Decomposition of the top decile, United States, 1910–2010
Figure 8.7.
High incomes and high wages in the United States, 1910–2010
Figure 8.8.
The transformation of the top 1 percent in the United States
Figure 8.9.
The composition of top incomes in the United States in 1929
Figure 8.10.
The composition of top incomes in the United States, 2007
Figure 9.1.
Minimum wage in France and the United States, 1950–2013
Figure 9.2.
Income inequality in Anglo-Saxon countries, 1910–2010
Figure 9.3.
Income inequality in Continental Europe and Japan, 1910–2010
Figure 9.4.
Income inequality in Northern and Southern Europe, 1910–2010
Figure 9.5.
The top decile income share in Anglo-Saxon countries, 1910–2010
Figure 9.6.
The top decile income share in Continental Europe and Japan, 1910–2010
Figure 9.7.
The top decile income share in Europe and the United States, 1900–2010
Figure 9.8.
Income inequality in Europe versus the United States, 1900–2010
Figure 9.9.
Income inequality in emerging countries, 1910–2010
Figure 10.1.
Wealth inequality in France, 1810–2010
Figure 10.2.
Wealth inequality in Paris versus France, 1810–2010
Figure 10.3.
Wealth inequality in Britain, 1810–2010
Figure 10.4.
Wealth inequality in Sweden, 1810–2010
Figure 10.5.
Wealth inequality in the United States, 1810–2010
Figure 10.6.
Wealth inequality in Europe versus the United States, 1810–2010
Figure 10.7.
Return to capital and growth: France, 1820–1913
Figure 10.8.
Capital share and saving rate: France, 1820–1913
Figure 10.9.
Rate of return versus growth rate at the world level, from Antiquity until 2100
Figure 11.1.
The annual inheritance flow as a fraction of national income, France, 1820–2010
Figure 11.2.
The mortality rate in France, 1820–2100
Figure 11.3.
Average age of decedents and inheritors: France, 1820–2100
Figure 11.4.
Inheritance flow versus mortality rate: France, 1820–2010
Figure 11.6.
Observed and simulated inheritance flow: France, 1820–2100
Figure 11.7.
The share of inherited wealth in total wealth: France, 1850–2100
Figure 11.10.
The dilemma of Rastignac for cohorts born in 1790–2030
Figure 11.12.
The inheritance flow in Europe, 1900–2010
Figure 12.1.
The world’s billionaires according to
Forbes,
1987–2013
Figure 12.2.
Billionaires as a fraction of global population and wealth, 1987–2013
Figure 12.3.
The share of top wealth fractiles in world wealth, 1987–2013
Figure 12.4.
The world capital/income ratio, 1870–2100
Figure 12.5.
The distribution of world capital, 1870–2100
Figure 12.6.
The net foreign asset position of rich countries
Figure 13.1.
Tax revenues in rich countries, 1870–2010
Figure 14.1.
Top income tax rates, 1900–2013
Figure 14.2.
Top inheritance tax rates, 1900–2013
Abu Dhabi Investment Authority, 456–457
Accounting: national, 55–59, 92, 230, 269; corporate, 203
Accumulation of wealth.
See
Wealth accumulation
Accumulation principle, infinite, 7–11, 228
Acemoglu, Daron, 624n20, 639nn45,48
Africa: production in, 60–61; income and, 63–64, 66, 68–69, 586nn33,34; growth
in, 75, 78–79, 94, 388; capital/income ratio in, 195, 461–462; taxes and, 491; capital
outflow from, 539.
See also
North Africa; South Africa; Sub-Saharan Africa
Age-wealth profile, 393–399
Agricultural land: in Britain and France, 117, 119; in Germany, 141; in America, 151–152;
elasticity of substitution and, 222–223