Astral Codex Ten Podcast feed 2024年07月17日
Book Review: Capital in the Twenty-First Century
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《21世纪的资本》不仅关注不平等问题,更是一部量化宏观经济历史的作品。作者皮凯蒂通过数十年对西方各国过去250年经济数据的研究,试图构建一个长期经济变化的动力理论,其成果涉及政治和经济领域的几乎所有重大问题,提出了宏大的理论。

📊 皮凯蒂通过梳理原始资料,收集了西方国家过去250年的经济数据,以此为基础构建经济变化的长期动力理论。

📈 皮凯蒂指出,自工业革命以来,正常的年经济增长率始终在1%到1.5%之间,任何偏离这一水平的增长都被视为异常。

🌍 异常增长的三种情况包括:高人口增长、经济泡沫和“追赶增长”。后者指国家在经历战争、政治变革或全球化后,经济得以快速恢复和发展的现象。

🔍 皮凯蒂的理论为我们理解和平时期处于技术前沿的国家为何增长率稳定在1%到1.5%提供了新的视角。

[Epistemic status: I am not an economist. Many people who are economists have reviewed this book already. I review it only because if I had to slog through reading this thing I at least want to get a blog post out of it. If anything in my review contradicts that of real economists, trust them instead of me.]

I.

Thomas Piketty’s Capital In The Twenty-First Century isn’t just a book on inequality. It’s a book about quantitative macroeconomic history. This is much more interesting than it sounds.

Piketty spent decades combing through primary sources trying to get good statistics for what the economies of various Western countries have been doing over the past 250 years. Armed with these data, he tries to put together a theory of the very-long-term forces at work in economic change. His results touch on almost every big question in politics and economics, and are able to propose sweeping theories where other people resort to parochial speculation. While more knowledgeable people than I are probably already familiar with much of this, I used him as an Econ History 101 textbook and was not at all disappointed in the results.

The most important thing I learned from Piketty is that since the Industrial Revolution, normal economic growth has always been (and maybe always will be) between 1% and 1.5% per year. This came as news to me, since I often hear about countries and eras with much higher growth rates. But Piketty says all such situations are abnormal in one of a few ways.

First, they can have high population growth. Population growth will increase GDP, and it will look like a high economic growth rate. But it doesn’t increase GDP per capita and it shouldn’t be considered the same as normal economic growth, which is always between 1% and 1.5% per year.

Second, they can have temporary bubbles. This definitely happens, but after the inevitable bust, the whole period will eventually average out to 1% to 1.5% per year.

Third, they can have “catch-up growth”. This is a broad category covering any period when a country that was previously underperforming its fundamentals gets a chance to catch up. This can happen after a long war in which a devastated country gets a chance to rebuild. Or it can happen after dropping communism or some other inefficient economic system, as the country transitions to a more practical form of production. Or it can happen when a Third World country globalizes and gets the benefits of First World technology and organization. But if a country is at peace and on the “technological frontier” (ie one of the highest-tech countries that has to invent its own advances and can’t get them by osmosis from somewhere else), it will always have growth of 1% to 1.5% per year.

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皮凯蒂 经济不平等 经济增长率 量化历史 经济理论
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