Thomas Piketty has mined 200 years of data
to support his theory that capitalism does not work. Photograph: Ed Alcock for
the Observer
Capitalism simply
isn't working and here are the reasons why
Economist Thomas
Piketty's message is bleak: the gap between rich and poor threatens to destroy
us
Will Hutton
The Observer, Saturday 12 April 2014 / http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2014/apr/12/capitalism-isnt-working-thomas-piketty
Suddenly, there is a new economist making
waves – and he is not on the right. At the conference of the Institute of New
Economic Thinking in Toronto last week, Thomas Piketty's book Capital in the
Twenty-First Century got at least one mention at every session I attended. You
have to go back to the 1970s and Milton Friedman for a single economist to have
had such an impact.
Like Friedman, Piketty is a man for the
times. For 1970s anxieties about inflation substitute today's concerns about
the emergence of the plutocratic rich and their impact on economy and society.
Piketty is in no doubt, as he indicates in an interview in today's Observer New
Review, that the current level of rising wealth inequality, set to grow still
further, now imperils the very future of capitalism. He has proved it.
It is a startling thesis and one
extraordinarily unwelcome to those who think capitalism and inequality need
each other. Capitalism requires inequality of wealth, runs this right-of-centre
argument, to stimulate risk-taking and effort; governments trying to stem it
with taxes on wealth, capital, inheritance and property kill the goose that
lays the golden egg. Thus Messrs Cameron and Osborne faithfully champion lower
inheritance taxes, refuse to reshape the council tax and boast about the
business-friendly low capital gains and corporation tax regime.
Piketty deploys 200 years of data to prove
them wrong. Capital, he argues, is blind. Once its returns – investing in
anything from buy-to-let property to a new car factory – exceed the real growth
of wages and output, as historically they always have done (excepting a few
periods such as 1910 to 1950), then inevitably the stock of capital will rise
disproportionately faster within the overall pattern of output. Wealth inequality
rises exponentially.
The process is made worse by inheritance
and, in the US and UK , by the rise
of extravagantly paid "super managers". High executive pay has
nothing to do with real merit, writes Piketty – it is much lower, for example,
in mainland Europe and Japan .
Rather, it has become an Anglo-Saxon social norm permitted by the ideology of
"meritocratic extremism", in essence, self-serving greed to keep up
with the other rich. This is an important element in Piketty's thinking: rising
inequality of wealth is not immutable. Societies can indulge it or they can
challenge it.
Inequality of wealth in Europe
and US is broadly twice the inequality of income – the top 10% have between 60%
and 70% of all wealth but merely 25% to 35% of all income. But this
concentration of wealth is already at pre-First World War levels, and heading
back to those of the late 19th century, when the luck of who might expect to
inherit what was the dominant element in economic and social life. There is an
iterative interaction between wealth and income: ultimately, great wealth adds
unearned rentier income to earned income, further ratcheting up the inequality
process.
The extravagances and incredible social
tensions of Edwardian England, belle epoque France and robber baron America
seemed for ever left behind, but Piketty shows how the period between 1910 and
1950, when that inequality was reduced, was aberrant. It took war and
depression to arrest the inequality dynamic, along with the need to introduce
high taxes on high incomes, especially unearned incomes, to sustain social
peace. Now the ineluctable process of blind capital multiplying faster in fewer
hands is under way again and on a global scale. The consequences, writes
Piketty, are "potentially terrifying".
For a start, almost no new entrepreneurs,
except one or two spectacular Silicon Valley
start-ups, can ever make sufficient new money to challenge the incredibly
powerful concentrations of existing wealth. In this sense, the "past
devours the future". It is telling that the Duke of Westminster and the
Earl of Cadogan are two of the richest men in Britain . This is entirely by virtue
of the fields in Mayfair and Chelsea
their families owned centuries ago and the unwillingness to clamp down on the
loopholes that allow the family estates to grow.
Anyone with the capacity to own in an era
when the returns exceed those of wages and output will quickly become disproportionately
and progressively richer. The incentive is to be a rentier rather than a
risk-taker: witness the explosion of buy-to-let. Our companies and our rich
don't need to back frontier innovation or even invest to produce: they just
need to harvest their returns and tax breaks, tax shelters and compound
interest will do the rest.
Capitalist dynamism is undermined, but
other forces join to wreck the system. Piketty notes that the rich are
effective at protecting their wealth from taxation and that progressively the
proportion of the total tax burden shouldered by those on middle incomes has
risen. In Britain, it may be true that the top 1% pays a third of all income
tax, but income tax constitutes only 25% of all tax revenue: 45% comes from
VAT, excise duties and national insurance paid by the mass of the population.
As a result, the burden of paying for
public goods such as education, health and housing is increasingly shouldered
by average taxpayers, who don't have the wherewithal to sustain them. Wealth
inequality thus becomes a recipe for slowing, innovation-averse, rentier
economies, tougher working conditions and degraded public services. Meanwhile,
the rich get ever richer and more detached from the societies of which they are
part: not by merit or hard work, but simply because they are lucky enough to be
in command of capital receiving higher returns than wages over time. Our
collective sense of justice is outraged.
The lesson of the past is that societies
try to protect themselves: they close their borders or have revolutions – or
end up going to war. Piketty fears a repeat. His critics argue that with higher
living standards resentment of the ultra-rich may no longer be as great – and
his data is under intense scrutiny for mistakes. So far it has all held up.
Nor does it seem likely that human beings'
inherent sense of justice has been suspended. Of course the reaction plays out
differently in different eras: I suspect some of the energy behind Scottish
nationalism is the desire to build a country where toxic wealth inequalities
are less indulged than in England .
The solutions – a top income tax rate of up
to 80%, effective inheritance tax, proper property taxes and, because the issue
is global, a global wealth tax – are currently inconceivable.
But as Piketty says, the task of economists
is to make them more conceivable. Capital certainly does that.
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