Capital and Ideology, by Thomas Piketty, is a magisterial look at inequality and its ideological tolerances in societies throughout history. The book starts with a long examination of the history of inequality touching on numerous subjects; trifunctional societies based on clergy, nobility and peasant are examined thoughtfully due to the influence these societies had on the development of economic and political systems. These class societies were based on principles of stability, keeping each class in its place, and balancing the power of clergy and nobility while suppressing the rights of peasants. These societies were very unequal, with most of a nations wealth being held by the Church and Noble class, with the peasants utilized as serfs or renters on land, with little or no wealth held at all in this third estate. Piketty calls these societies Proprietarian - they built structures around the idea of owning or controlling property, including other humans. Property rights were sacred; ordained by God and King, and most peasants paid overlapping and all encompassing taxes on property they existed on; tithes, corvee labour, and such. Piketty looks at how states in Europe around the time of the French revolution, began to move beyond this system, removing regalian rights from the church and nobility and putting it in the hands of the state. This allowed taxes to become more egalitarian - meaning taxes were collected in a measured and constant way, instead of on an ad hoc basis in trifunctional societies. Furthermore, these discussions on taxes led to the growth of ideas on progressive taxation, and discussions on human rights, fair taxation, and political representaiton.
Piketty goes on to examine historical societies in Eastern Europe, India and China as well. These areas of the world grappled with different and interesting forms of ideology and inequality. Russia was a society that adopted serfdom most harshly. Serfs were tied to the land with little rights to movement and political or human rights. This system was entrenched in later Russian society up to the reforms of the 19th century and the eventual collapse of Russia. Piketty compares Serfdom to Slavery and finds similar aspects and impacts on a nations economies and political systems. In India, especially after the British invasion and independence, the nation has struggled with cultural, caste and religious struggles. Although India is one of the most unequal states in the modern world, in terms of the bottom 90%'s share of income, the state is also a well functioning democracy that struggles with the colonial cast legacy. This has led to interesting and internalized systems of affirmative action - the most stringent in the world in some cases. Even so, glaring poverty is common, and India struggles with issues of tax collection, state capacity, and internal and external security issues that often revolve around identitarian considerations (think modern BJP and Hindu nationalism). China also had a system that was unequal in many ways, but developed different ideologies than Europe or India. The focus here was on state capacity and control over peripheries. China developed a bureaucratic examination system which Piketty compares to the modern US higher education system - similar numbers of participants, and with the ability to buy into specific exam categories or levels - comparable to US legacy students in high end universities.
A discussion on slavery and colonialism follows. These societies were the most unequal in history so far in terms of share of income. Haiti, Brazil, and the Southern US had similar levels of wealth inequality. In the emancipation of slaves, an examination of punitive actions to reward slave owners is had. This was an interesting discussion: in the UK the tax payer reimbursed slave owners through reparation payments - not slaves. In Haiti, France imposed a huge fine through gunboat diplomacy, and it was only waived by the French government in the 1950's. The US was the only slave system that did not reimburse their slave owners due to their loss in the civil war. However, instead they built in a system that separated and reduced the rights of black Americans, setting them in a cycle of wage poverty and near slavery, with much reduced civil rights and extreme prejudices that continue today.
Piketty then examines the birth of our modern neo-proprietarianism and capitalism, from its birth in pre-WWI society. This form of capitalism favoured capitalist classes in most countries- a very small percentage, and utilized labour from the working classes at low wages and with little rights. This form of capitalism led to imperialism and industrialization, with colonies supplying the raw materials for metropolitan growth. These nations were exploitative at their core; wealth transfers to colonies were often negligible and frowned upon - ie. France's Empire in Africa, with policy setting tending to encourage creating colonial budgets within the colony. However locals and natives were not hired often into the colonial administration, and if they were, they were paid at a much smaller rate than their white counterparts. This system collapsed after WWII due to high debt levels, destruction, and growing unrest over political rights and exploitation, leading to the decolonization of the 60's and 70's. High government debt levels encouraged macroeconomic policies that favoured wealth redistribution, inflation, and infrastructure investment, which heavily reduced the debt burden of nations toward their wealthier citizens. This was the most egalitarian time in human history, with progressive taxes set on wealth (up to 90% in the US and UK), the growth of social democracy in the Nordic countries and West Germany, and of course, the competing ideologies of US led social democracy, and USSR led communism.
Piketty examines both systems in detail. Communism failed because it too, led to systems of great inequality. Although shares of income were more evenly distributed than in the Western world, the USSR struggled to compete due to the inefficiencies of total government control over economies, which led to a stifling of innovation, and their overbearing political system, with little freedoms for the average citizen. The Western world, by contrast, explored social democracy. Colonies were shed and investments made in education and wealth redistribution, as well as public infrastructure. States in Europe, like Sweden and Germany, developed strong systems of co-management, improving workers decision making power in firm level bargaining and decision making, and encouraging democratization of work spaces, allowing the average citizen to vote and make decisions about their own incomes - a system that continues (in a reduced fashion) today. The US and UK, by contrast, began to embrace neo-proprietarian ideologies - focusing on shareholder growth over other forms of income distribution. This has led to our modern system of wealth inequality, where the moneyed classes own more than 50% of the wealth in some instances (the US, Middle East, Brazil and India are the most unequal areas of the world - even more so, in some instances, than Russia or China). This wealth inequality is justified as "fair", with ideas about personal property, meritocracy, and lassaiz faire business' as the main justifications. These ideas are proven false, however. The US education system is extremely unequal, from primary upward, with legacy students, donations, and poor education investment being the norm. Hard working individuals are most often passed over by legacy students, who utilize the low tax environment to receive money through their estate, invest it in capital for a high return, and engage in little productive or innovative tasks. Finally, the small government system is also a sham - the US government is massive and uses government policy to set up systems of inequality that favour the wealthy. Large corporations are cushioned with government bailouts in times of crisis, and banking and financial regulations favour financial speculation and adventurism or investments in infrastructure, research, or more stable and equitable investments.
The European system is discussed as well. The European Union lacks teeth in terms of any overarching political, economic, or taxation policies. This system leads to unequal interest rates and distributions of capital. For example, German tax payers pay about 0.2-0.3% of their funds to wealth transfers to Eastern European and Southern European states, while extracting almost 7% of many Eastern European countries GDP through transfers from private firms. This leads to a system where the richer economies grow, while the poorer economies struggle to keep up. It is clear then, why euro-skeptic ideals are growing, both in countries who engage in wealth transfers (Brexit, AFD, etc.) and those who see exploitation from Brussels (Poland, Hungary etc.)
Piketty examines many ideas throughout this massive tome, more than I can really discuss here. The take away for me is the interesting history of inequality regimes, and the way Piketty expertly frames politics in history in terms of economies, inequalities, and ideologies. Piketty engages with social democratic ideas - public ownership of critical infrastructure, high progressive wealth taxes, inheritance taxes, and income taxes, high investment in public education and research, racial and sexual equality, and so on. Piketty is critical of the socialism of the 1970's, due to its engagement with the shift to neo-proprietarian ideology in the 19980's, with exploitative international bodies like the World Bank and IMF, as well as their reluctance to alter the taxation system and promote the benefits of progressive taxation, while focusing on USSR style public takeovers. Piketty looks at the models of Germany and Sweden in particular as beneficial systems - these nations have the lowest level of wealth inequality in the modern world, with systems of co-management and unionization that encourage the average citizen to contribute to democratic decision making systems, as opposed to the US system of UK parliamentary system, with high levels of government control and wealth concentration, declining unionization rates, and low levels of engagement with workers, lower classes, and racial minorities. To be clear, the Swedish or German system are also not ideal, with issues of racism, competition with free market conservative parties, and so on being present.
Piketty also examines other modern systems - China, Russia, the Middle East, Eastern Europe, and so on. These areas all have differing ideals of wealth inequality - Russia as a oligarchical society, China with its idealized party-managed democracy, and the Middle East as authoritarian petro-states run by billionaires. These systems are all discussed in detail, and show that different ideas have an impact on wealth inequality - China is the most egalitarian of the three, with the Middle East being the least.
All in all, this book is fantastic and epic. It touches on so many subjects in politics, history, economics and sociology that it would be impossible for me to write a more comprehensive review. This book is both an examination of why and how societies develop inequality systems, and ideas top develop more egalitarian ones. Piketty by no means advocates for communist society, where ideally all incomes are equal. He instead looks at major reforms that are needed within our capitalist, liberal systems to create concrete change. This book is not just eurocentric, as the systems of democracy, liberalism, capitalism, and globalization touch all corners of the globe. The challenge, as Piketty points out, is the differences within or between nations and regions due to differing political cultures, histories, ideas, tolerances, and appetites for inequality. Piketty despairs the growth of social nativism in the modern world, and advocates for transnational agreements on taxation, rights, and commerce. Such systems are being experimented with in numerous ways; The EU's loose federation of nation states, the US system of global dominance, the Chinese system of Belt and Road and one party rule, and the federalized, decentralized Indian system, are a small sampling of the many different ways and systems that are being experimented with. These systems change, grow, contract and share with each other, and each one will have a major impact in some form on the future, in terms of how to combat wealth inequality, and the political resilience of systems.
I could say more, but on the last note; this is a book to read for anyone interested in learning how the world works. This is a yearning account of democracy, social justice, environmentalism and so much more, with the idea that changing how we perceive inequality, and asking for, and demanding a better system is an absolute necessity. It goes beyond petty party squabbles in the States to show that issues of inequality transcend a four year election cycle, and can be addressed in so many ways. A brilliant read, and a high recommendation.