(First published in the Nelson Mail and Manawatu Standard, June 18.)
HANDS UP all those who have read French economist Thomas
Piketty’s best-selling book Capital in
the Twenty-First Century.
As I thought – not many of you. Perhaps you were put off by
the fact that it runs to a dense 685 pages.
I admit I haven’t tackled it either, but I’ve read enough
reviews to have a pretty clear idea what the book is all about.
The English translation was published only two months ago
but already it has made Piketty the international poster boy for the Left. He
contends that unequal distribution of wealth – a current political
preoccupation throughout the Western world – is the inevitable result of a
system which, over time, concentrates economic power in the hands of a tiny
few.
Piketty argues that this is bad for democracy and should be
countered by taxing the very rich until their pips squeak.
None of this strikes me as breathtakingly original, but his
argument struck a chord in a world still reeling from the global financial
crisis and understandably resentful of the corporate greed and dishonesty that
caused it.
Such books seem to come along every few years, each one
being rapturously acclaimed as exposing the iniquity of capitalism. A few years
ago it was The Spirit Level: Why More
Equal Societies Almost Always Do Better – a book that was similarly
concerned with inequality, and made just as much impact.
The British academics who produced that tome are still
dining out on its popularity. Only last month they were in New Zealand for a
series of lectures at the University of Auckland, during which they preached to
the converted about the corrosive effects of income disparity.
I have no doubt there is some truth in what they say. It
seems obvious that a relatively egalitarian society – the type that New Zealand
once took pride in being – will feel more cohesive than one in which there’s a
yawning gap between those at the top and those at the bottom.
It’s also unarguable that there are far more conspicuously
rich people than there were a generation ago. You can see that from the number
of expensive cars on the road, the preposterous house prices in Remuera and
Oriental Bay, and the even more preposterous salaries paid to corporate
executives of often dubious calibre.
As I was writing this, I happened to hear a radio interview
with the proprietors of a Hawke’s Bay game farm where the rich go to shoot
pheasants. The fee: $2750 per person, per day. It sounded more like the England
of Downton Abbey than the New Zealand
I grew up in.
The conventional view is that this inequality is the outcome
of a rapacious, winner-takes-all economic system. But the crucial point,
surely, is how well the majority of people are doing. And my observation is
that most New Zealanders enjoy a vastly higher standard of living now than they
did, say, 30 years ago. They live in better houses, drive better cars, eat out
more often and think little of taking an overseas holiday.
Internationally, too, statistics show that more and more
countries are being lifted out of poverty. And though it may be hard for the
Left to swallow, the inconvenient truth is that it’s happening as a result of
global capitalism.
What’s more, “poverty” in New Zealand is measured in
relative terms. It’s defined not by people’s ability to afford the necessities
of life, but by how well they are doing compared with the majority. So there
will always be people who are considered hard done by, no matter how affluent
society as a whole becomes.
That doesn’t mean we shouldn’t be seriously concerned about
the minority of people trapped at the bottom of the heap, but it does highlight
the fact that a degree of inequality is built in to the way we measure things.
But back to Piketty. His solution to the supposed problem of
inequality is as unoriginal as his explanation for the cause.
Imposing huge taxes on the rich will certainly punish them
for their wealth, and thus give satisfaction to the many people who believe
that anyone who is rich must also be evil.
But is that a sound basis, either morally or economically,
for creating a fairer society? Are the people at the bottom of the pile, or
even the great number in the middle, helped by the simplistic act of
transferring wealth from those at the top, with the attendant risk of
suppressing the economic activity that creates prosperity for everyone?
From what I’ve read of it, Piketty’s book consists of
familiar old resentments dressed up in new garb. It’s underpinned by the
discredited belief that an omniscient and benevolent state, through taxation
and other instruments of control, can produce a society where everyone is
better off.
I’m all for a more equal society, but my fear is that
Piketty’s proposed medicine could be far more damaging than the illness.
5 comments:
Hi Karl
I'm in posession of the antidote.
The Spirit of Democratic Capitalisim, written thirty years ago by Michael Novak.
I purchased two copies just recently, both are now out being read by friends and family. I highly recommend it.
Available here:
http://www.bookdepository.com/Spirit-Democratic-Capitalism-Michael-Novak/9780819178237
While Karl is an effusive writer, I'm not sure he is much of a reader, Brendan. Nor historian, nor political analyst.
Here is another poster-boy of us Lefties.
http://www.marxist.com/new-zealand-perspectives-2014.htm
Myself? I am at retirement age, first voted for Muldoon's government, then Labour until Rogernomics, then Green until their support for Labour and loss of their bottom-line, and am now looking favourably at the Internet-MANA party.
Steady-as-she-goes neo-liberalism, has been a disaster. Plain and simple.
Take a look at the current TiSA headed our way.
https://wikileaks.org/tisa-financial/analysis.html
Art quotes an article by Jane Kelsey to support his view? As someone about Arts' age, I can testify from experience that New Zealanders are better off now than they have ever been. Beneficiaries to day have more income than my parents did when I were a lad in the fifties. And the opportunities available to my children and their children are wonderful. What's not to like?
I'm with you Max! Life in the 1950's wasn't much chop for most- a very grey and uniform life in general. It seems to me that people like Art Phong and Chris Trotter have a very idealised view of the 1950's and 1960's and would like to return to some golden age that never existed.Many essentials are today cheaper than they have ever been
I've only read the first fifty-or-so pages of Pikkety which is less than a tenth of the book, but one observation I've made is that a lot of the text is a super-condensed summary of several centuries of economic thought, overlaid with Pikkety's critique of same. So when you read a review summarising Pikkety you're reading a summary of a summary, which means that your readers are reading a summary of a summary of a summary.
I'd also add that almost every concern you have about Pikkety's ideas are directly addressed by him in the introduction to his book which is, like forty pages of non-technical prose, which shouldn't be too much of a strain.
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