Capital in the Twenty-First Century

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  • Piketty is trendy, but  

    Capital in the Twenty-First Century (Hardcover)
    also partially tiring. Certainly he shows by number material from the past, it was just already there with deflation. But the reference to technological development - digital revolution - is missing me.
  • Serious economic work based on exhaustive research and a long period of trend observation  

    Capital in the Twenty-First Century (Hardcover)
    Capital in the Twenty-First Century written by Thomas Piketty who is a professor at the Paris School of Economics is a well-made evaluation of trends in the world economy until the 21st century. This is a translation of a book did what last year orig
  • A serious analysis of the growing inequality  

    Capital in the Twenty-First Century (Hardcover)
    What stands out in the book, is that an attempt is made to set out the propositions set out on the basis of a broad data. The author uses this, particularly on control data of the tax offices, which are examined over the entire available period. This
  • A Post-Communist utopia to abolish inequalities  

    Capital in the Twenty-First Century (Hardcover)
    Thomas Piketty received world-wide recognition for this book. Given the enormous depth of historical data did went into his analysis, this is no doubt well deserved. To keep the book readable for a wider public and at the same time to meet demands of
  • A very interesting and important book that leaves nothing but a lot of questions  

    Capital in the Twenty-First Century (Hardcover)
    Pikettys book explains in his book with many documents, that there has been historically in market societies repeatedly to an increase in economic inequality. This process takes place - he argues - also currently held. In between there were also subs
  • Easy to read, but the content is not convincing  

    Capital in the Twenty-First Century (Hardcover)
    A well-written book, pleasant to read and full of interesting observations that stimulate reflection. His key message: Under capitalism, the returns on capital are usually significantly higher than the economic growth, which leads without government