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Index
Title Page Copyright Dedication Contents Introduction: Capital in the Twenty-First Century, Three Years Later I. Reception
1. The Piketty Phenomenon 2. Thomas Piketty Is Right 3. Why We’re in a New Gilded Age
II. Conceptions of Capital
4. What’s Wrong with Capital in the Twenty-First Century’s Model? 5. A Political Economy Take on W / Y 6. The Ubiquitous Nature of Slave Capital 7. Human Capital and Wealth before and after Capital in the Twenty-First Century 8. Exploring the Effects of Technology on Income and Wealth Inequality 9. Income Inequality, Wage Determination, and the Fissured Workplace
III. Dimensions of Inequality
10. Increasing Capital Income Share and Its Effect on Personal Income Inequality 11. Global Inequality 12. The Geographies of Capital in the Twenty-First Century: Inequality, Political Economy, and Space 13. The Research Agenda after Capital in the Twenty-First Century 14. Macro Models of Wealth Inequality 15. A Feminist Interpretation of Patrimonial Capitalism 16. What Does Rising Inequality Mean for the Macroeconomy? 17. Rising Inequality and Economic Stability
IV. The Political Economy of Capital and Capitalism
18. Inequality and the Rise of Social Democracy: An Ideological History 19. The Legal Constitution of Capitalism 20. The Historical Origins of Global Inequality 21. Everywhere and Nowhere: Politics in Capital in the Twenty-First Century
V. Piketty Responds
22. Toward a Reconciliation between Economics and the Social Sciences
Notes Acknowledgments Index
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