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Again on Piketty’s Capital in the Twenty-First Century or Why National Accounts and Three Simple Laws Should not be a Substitute for Economic Theory

Christian Flamant

Abstract

This paper reviews Piketty’s book Capital in the 21st Century. Although the facts described by Piketty are widely indisputable, the paper criticizes the actual economic theory underlying the central thesis of the book, and this on two main points: first the nature and thus the consistency of capital, and second the direction of causality. The paper discusses first the confusion made by Piketty between “capital” and “wealth” which for him cover the same economic reality, and shows that productive capital, real estate capital and net financial assets cannot be put on the same conceptual level. Secondly, it shows that the rate of return on capital as the ultimate explanatory factor for the growth in inequalities does not hold, because Piketty’s three laws are not acceptable as such: the first one is a mere tautology, the second implies the identity of the long-term growth rates of income and capital, and for the third law the fact that r is greater than g is not in itself a sufficient condition for β and therefore α to increase. Even in Piketty’s analysis it is not really r but s, the owners of capital’s consumption choices, which drive capital accumulation. The paper finally proposes an alternative explanation for the evolution of developed economies over the last 35 years.

Published on 10th July, 2015, in World Social and Economic Review No 5, July 2015