Capital in the Twenty-First CenturyHarvard University Press, 14 ago 2017 - 816 pagine A New York Times #1 Bestseller |
Dall'interno del libro
Risultati 1-5 di 83
... increase until World War I. The communist revolution did indeed take place, but in the most backward country in ... increasing productivity, which is a force that can to some extent serve as a counterweight to the process of accumulation ...
... increase and then decrease over the course of industrialization and economic development. According to Kuznets, a first phase of naturally increasing inequality associated with the early stages of industrialization, which in the United ...
... increase of inequality in the nineteenth century, but it seemed obvious to him (as to most observers) that such an increase had occurred. 16. As Kuznets himself put it: “This is perhaps 5 percent empirical information and 95 percent ...
... increase the stock of wealth steadily and substantially. If, moreover, the rate of return on capital remains significantly above the growth rate for an extended period of time (which is more likely when the growth rate is low, though ...
... increase in territory owing to westward expansion in the nineteenth century), it is clearly no longer the same country. The dynamics and structure of inequality look very different in a country whose population increases by a factor of ...
Sommario
1 | |
47 | |
The Dynamics of the CapitalIncome Ratio | 139 |
The Structure of Inequality | 295 |
Regulating Capital in the TwentyFirst Century | 595 |
Contents in Detail | 755 |
List of Tables and Illustrations | 765 |
Index | 771 |