Anti-Piketty

CATO INSTITUTEISBN: 9781944424251

Capital for the 21st-Century

Price:
Sale price$38.99


Imprint: CATO INSTITUTE
By: Emmanuel Martin,Jeffrey Miron,Nicolas Lecaussin,Jean-Philippe Delsol
Release Date:
Format:
PAPERBACK
Pages:
340

Description

Emmanuel Martin is the director of the Institute for Economic Studies-Europe, an educational think tank based in Paris. He holds a PhD in economics from the University of Aix-en-Provence in France. Dr Martin has moderated and lectured in seminars for the Institute for Economic Studies, the Friedrich Naumann Stiftung, and the Atlas Network in various countries, and he has been widely published on various topics from French politics and economics to African issues in various newspapers and magazines across the globe. Jean-Philippe Delsol is a tax lawyer, doctor of law, and president of the Institute for Research in Economic and Fiscal Issues (IREF). He regularly publishes articles in the French economic press. He is the author of Pourquoi Je Vais Quitter la France (Tatamis, 2013) and, with Nicolas Lecaussin, A Quoi Servent les Riches (JC Lattes, 2012, "What's the Use of the Rich"). Nicolas Lecaussin is director of the Institute for Research in Economic and Fiscal Issues (IREF), a graduate of the Paris Institute of Political Studies (Sciences Po), founder of Entrepreneur Junior, and author of multiple books.

Preface (TBC) Jeffrey Miron Introduction Jean-Philippe Delsol and Emmanuel Martin Part 1. An Apocalyptic Vision Section 1. No Declining Inequality? 1. The Great Process of Equalization of Conditions by Jean-Philippe Delsol 2. Longevity, Education, and the Huge New Worldwide Increases in Equality by Nicholas Eberstadt Section 2. An Anti-Rich Bias 3. Where Are the "Super Rich" of 1987? by Juan Ramon Rallo 4. Piketty on Management and Wealth by Henri Lepage 5. The Sociology of Piketty's Anti-Rich Stance by Nicolas Lecaussin Section 3. No Capital for the Poor? 6. Piketty Gets It Wrong by Michael Tanner 7. Thomas Piketty's Great Contradiction by Juan Ramon Rallo 8. Piketty and Emerging Markets by Alvaro Vargas Llosa Part 2. Criticizing the Empirical Strength of Capital in the 21st Century Section 4. On Capital and Incomes: Questionable Data, Regrettable Omissions 9. Piketty's Numbers Don't Add Up by Martin Feldstein 10. The Rich, and Everyone Else, Get Richer by Richard Burkhauser 11. Is Housing Capital? by Henri Lepage 12. How to Inflate the Return of Capital by Jean-Philippe Delsol Section 5. Forging Statistics, Historical Inconsistencies 13. The Financial Times vs. Piketty by Chris Giles 14. Piketty Is Misleading about the Swedish Case by Malin Sahlen and Salim Furth 15. Challenging the Empirical Contribution of Thomas Piketty's Capital in the 21st Century by Phillip W. Magness and Robert P. Murphy Part 3. Theory and Policy Section 6. The Dangers of the Historicist Method 16. The Rise and Decline of the General Laws of Capitalism by Daron Acemoglu and James A. Robinson 17. Get Real: A Review of Thomas Piketty's Capital in the 21st Century by Donald J. Boudreaux Section 7. What Can We Conclude From 18. Capital, Returns, and Risk: A Critique of Thomas Piketty's Capital in the 21st Century by Randall Holcombe 19. Piketty's World Formula by Hans-Werner Sinn 20. A Controversial Assumption by Henri Lepage 21. An Infinite Growth of Large Fortunes? The Limits of Mathematics by Jean-Philippe Delsol Section 8. Taxation: Consequences of Piketty's Policies and Alternative Reforms. 22. Piketty's Plan for Equality Would Reduce Personal Freedom and Undermine Growth by James A. Dorn 23. Tax Reform: Not the Piketty Way by Jean-Philippe Delsol and Nicolas Lecaus

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