Capital in the Twenty-First CenturyHarvard University Press, 14 ago 2017 - 816 pagine A New York Times #1 Bestseller |
Dall'interno del libro
Risultati 6-10 di 84
... Sources and series: see piketty.pse.ens.fr/capital21c. Kuznets established for the period 1913–1948. The top decile claimed as much as 45–50 percent of national income in the 1910s–1920s before dropping to 30–35 percent by the end of ...
... sources and establishing historical time series pertaining to the distribution of income and wealth. As the book proceeds, I sometimes appeal to theory and to abstract models and concepts, but I try to do so sparingly, and only to the ...
... sources made the first annual series of national income data possible. These generally went back as far as the beginning of the twentieth century or the last decades of the nineteenth. They were established for the United States by ...
... Sources and series: see piketty.pse.ens.fr/capital21c. Asia Africa America Europe P e r c a p i t a G. figure 1.1. The distribution of world output, 1700–2012 figure 1.2. The distribution of world population, 1700–2012 Europe's ...
... Sources and series: see piketty.pse.ens.fr/capital21c. Furthermore, both Europe and the Americas can be broken down into two highly unequal subregions: a hyperdeveloped core and a less developed periphery. Broadly speaking, global ...
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 |