Since the publication of Capital in the Twenty-First Century a few months ago, its author, French economist Thomas Piketty, has become a serious contender for the title of World’s Most Talked About Economist. Piketty’s book, which studies inequality on the scale of global history, “has transformed our economic discourse,” according to a review from New York Times columnist and Nobel Prize-winning economist Paul Krugman.
The book itself is hardly a beach read, but the thesis is easy enough to understand: Piketty argues that capital inexorably tends to concentrate at the top, leading to ever-increasing levels of inequality. In other words, it’s in the nature of the global economic order for the rich to keep getting richer. To combat that trend, Piketty suggests a the major governments of the world start taxing the rich more aggressively.
That’s the message he took to the United States on Tax Day, when he discussed inequality and the possibility for a wealth tax at two Washington, D.C. events.
“I’m not proposing to increase capital taxation as a rule,” said Piketty at a Tuesday morning speech hosted by the Economic Policy Institute. “What I’m advocating is to make it progressive.”









