Capital and Ideology Quotes
Capital and Ideology
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Thomas Piketty3,094 ratings, 4.28 average rating, 448 reviews
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Capital and Ideology Quotes
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“Paradoxically, the sources available today (in the era of big data) are less precise than those that were available a century ago due to the internationalization of wealth, the proliferation of tax havens, and above all, lack of political will to enforce financial transparency, so it is quite possible that we are underestimating the level of wealth inequality in recent decades.”
― Capital and Ideology
― Capital and Ideology
“Inequality is neither economic nor technological; it is ideological and political. This is no doubt the most striking conclusion to emerge from the historical approach I take in this book. In other words, the market and competition, profits and wages, capital and debt, skilled and unskilled workers, natives and aliens, tax havens and competitiveness—none of these things exist as such. All are social and historical constructs, which depend entirely on the legal, fiscal, educational, and political systems that people choose to adopt and the conceptual definitions they choose to work with.”
― Capital and Ideology
― Capital and Ideology
“Billionaires think that anything goes, are enamored of geoengineering, and detest nothing so much as simple but unpleasant solutions (such as paying taxes and living quietly).”
― Capital and Ideology
― Capital and Ideology
“The reality is that extreme inequality recurs again and again; to deal with it, societies need institutions capable of periodically redefining and redistributing property rights. The refusal to do so in as transparent and peaceful a manner as possible only increases the likelihood of more violent but less effective remedies.”
― Capital and Ideology
― Capital and Ideology
“We should not overestimate the extent of the diffusion of ownership that has taken place over the past two centuries: the egalitarian ownership society—or even, more modestly, a society in which the poorest half of the population owns more than a token share of the wealth—has yet to be invented.”
― Capital and Ideology
― Capital and Ideology
“In practice, the term “populism” has become the ultimate weapon in the hands of the objectively privileged social classes, a means to dismiss out of hand any criticism of their preferred political choices and policies. Gone is the need for any debate about novel social and fiscal arrangements or alternative ways of organizing globalization. It is enough to brand dissenters as “populists” to end all discussion with a clear conscience and foreclose debate.”
― Capital and Ideology
― Capital and Ideology
“Consider, for example, the unrivaled ability of the United States to impose staggering sanctions on foreign firms as well as dissuasive commercial and financial embargoes on governments deemed to be insufficiently cooperative—an ability not unrelated to US global military dominance.”
― Capital and Ideology
― Capital and Ideology
“In particular, journalists and citizens all too often bow to the expertise of economists, limited though it is, and hesitate to express opinions about wages and profits, taxes and debts, trade and capital. But if the people are to be sovereign—as democracy says they should be—these subjects are not optional. Their complexity is such that it is unjustifiable to abandon them to a small caste of experts. The contrary is true. Precisely because they are so complex, only broad collective deliberation, based on reason and on the past history and experience of every citizen, can lead to progress toward resolving these issues. Ultimately, this book has only one goal: to enable citizens to reclaim possession of economic and historical knowledge.”
― Capital and Ideology
― Capital and Ideology
“A just society is one that allows all of its members access to the widest possible range of fundamental goods. Fundamental goods include education, health, the right to vote, and more generally to participate as fully as possible in the various forms of social, cultural, economic, civic, and political life. A just society organizes socioeconomic relations, property rights, and the distribution of income and wealth in such a way as to allow its least advantaged members to enjoy the highest possible life conditions. A just society in no way requires absolute uniformity or equality. To the extent that income and wealth inequalities are the result of different aspirations and distinct life choices or permit improvement of the standard of living and expansion of the opportunities available to the disadvantaged, they may be considered just. But this must be demonstrated, not assumed, and this argument cannot be invoked to justify any degree of inequality whatsoever, as it too often is.”
― Capital and Ideology
― Capital and Ideology
“The whole history of inequality regimes shows that what makes historical change possible is above all the existence of social and political mobilizations for change and concrete experimentation with alternative arrangements.”
― Capital and Ideology
― Capital and Ideology
“One of the most important lessons of this book is the following: ideas and ideologies count in history, but unless they are set against the logic of events, with due attention to historical experimentation and concrete institutional practices (to say nothing of potentially violent crises), they are useless.”
― Capital and Ideology
― Capital and Ideology
“Meritocratic discourse generally glorifies the winners in the economic system while stigmatizing the losers for their supposed lack of merit,”
― Capital and Ideology
― Capital and Ideology
“Every society has no choice but to make sense of its inequalities,”
― Capital and Ideology
― Capital and Ideology
“the level of inequality is above all society’s ideological, political, and institutional capacity to justify and structure inequality and not the level of wealth or development as such.”
― Capital and Ideology
― Capital and Ideology
“We find the same pattern in virtually every region of the world: the identity cleavage deepened and conflicts over boundaries intensified while the wealth cleavage weakened and criticism of wealth became muted.”
― Capital and Ideology
― Capital and Ideology
“In Destiny and Desire (2008),”
― Capital and Ideology
― Capital and Ideology
“In 2014, the rate of access to higher education (percentage of individuals age 19–21 enrolled in a college, university, or other institution of higher education) was barely 30 percent for children of the poorest 10 percent in the United States and 90 percent for the richest 10 percent.”
― Capital and Ideology
― Capital and Ideology
“Change comes when the short-term logic of events, intersects with the long term evolution of ideas.”
― Capital and Ideology
― Capital and Ideology
“At this stage, I will simply insist on a conclusion we have encountered before: namely, that it is impossible to understand the structure of inequality today without taking into account the heavy inegalitarian legacy of slavery and colonialism.”
― Capital and Ideology
― Capital and Ideology
“Alternation between parties is normal in a democracy, and these Democratic victories were in part a consequence of the voters’ natural fatigue with the Republicans, who had also been tarnished by various financial scandals, as often happens to parties in power.”
― Capital and Ideology
― Capital and Ideology
“For Finley, there were very few true slave societies: Athens and Rome in antiquity and then Brazil, the southern United States, and the West Indies in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. In these cases, slaves may have represented from 30 to 50 percent of the total population (or even more in the West Indies).”
― Capital and Ideology
― Capital and Ideology
“Between 1880 and 1914 the world was in perpetual flux. The automobile, the electric light, the trans-Atlantic steamship, the telegraph, and radio—all were invented in the space of a few decades. The economic and social consequences of those inventions were surely as important as those of Facebook, Amazon, and Uber. The point is crucial, because it shows that the hyper-inegalitarianism of the prewar era was not a consequence of a bygone era with little or no similarity to today’s world. In fact, the Belle Époque resembles today’s world in many ways, even if essential differences remain.”
― Capital and Ideology
― Capital and Ideology
“inequality in these regions has always been high: they never experienced a relatively egalitarian “social-democratic” phase (much less a communist one).”
― Capital and Ideology
― Capital and Ideology
“South Africa, Brazil, and the Middle East stand at the frontier of modern inequality, with top decile shares of 55–65 percent.”
― Capital and Ideology
― Capital and Ideology
“If this book has been able to awaken the reader’s interest in new questions and enlighten her with knowledge she did not previously possess, my goal will have been fully achieved.”
― Capital and Ideology
― Capital and Ideology
“The history of all hitherto existing societies is the history of the struggle of ideologies and the quest for justice.”
― Capital and Ideology
― Capital and Ideology
“History is the product of crises;”
― Capital and Ideology
― Capital and Ideology
“All human societies need to justify their inequalities.”
― Capital and Ideology
― Capital and Ideology
“Political-ideological transformation depends above all on the balance of power of the contending groups and their relative capacity for mobilization,”
― Capital and Ideology
― Capital and Ideology
“Without a credible new universalistic and egalitarian narrative, it is all too likely that the challenges of rising inequality, immigration, and climate change will precipitate a retreat into identitarian* nationalist politics based on fears of a “great replacement” of one population by another. We saw this in Europe in the first half of the twentieth century, and it seems to be happening again in various parts of the world in the first decades of the twenty-first century.”
― Capital and Ideology
― Capital and Ideology
