The book’s core argument is expressed through a simple inequality: .
Thomas Piketty's (published in English as Capital in the Twenty-First Century ) is a landmark 700-page study that redefined the global conversation on economic inequality. Rather than relying on abstract mathematical models, Piketty utilizes over 200 years of tax and inheritance data from 20 countries to argue that modern capitalism inherently tends toward a concentration of wealth. The Central Thesis: Das Kapital im 21. Jahrhundert
(historically 1–2%). This means that wealth accumulated through capital grows faster than wealth earned through labor. The book’s core argument is expressed through a
(Rate of Return): The annual return on invested capital (profits, dividends, rents). The Central Thesis: (historically 1–2%)
(Economic Growth): The annual growth of the total economy (wages and output). Piketty demonstrates that throughout most of history, (historically 4–5%) has consistently exceeded