A Capital's Capital : Two Hundred Years of Wealth and Inequality in Paris
A Capital's Capital : Two Hundred Years of Wealth and Inequality in Paris
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Author(s): Postel-Vinay, Gilles
ISBN No.: 9780691276113
Pages: 464
Year: 202602
Format: Trade Cloth (Hard Cover)
Price: $ 69.93
Dispatch delay: Dispatched between 7 to 15 days
Status: Available

"Every economic historian knows that anything Postel-Vinay and Rosenthal write is essential reading. Their latest tour de force not only delves deeper than ever before into archival data, but also teaches us how to incorporate the allocation of public services and other overlooked dimensions of wealth distribution into the study of economic inequality." --Francesca Trivellato, Institute for Advanced Study "This is a monumental contribution to our understanding of wealth accumulation and wealth inequality. Based on a quarter century of research and a rare historical context that allows for tracking wealth trends over the long run, Postel-Vinay and Rosenthal have given us an unparalleled picture of Parisian wealth and the factors that drove it." --David Stasavage, author of The Decline and Rise of Democracy: A Global History from Antiquity to Today "Postel-Vinay and Rosenthal masterfully exploit Parisian inheritance tax records that extend over two centuries and cover not just the rich, which in the capital could be very rich, but also a broader spectrum of those with positive balances at death, especially in the twentieth century. Who, at what point, benefitted or lost out the most by holding stocks and bonds versus real estate or a simple pension, and how did revolutions, wars, depressions, and socialist regimes affect those outcomes? It is all here." --Carole Shammas, University of Southern California "To capture how economic inequality relates to politics, government interventions, and wartime shocks, one can do no better than to study what happened in Paris over the last two hundred years. With their massive accounting of Parisians' wealth at death, Postel-Vinay and Rosenthal reveal what changed and what did not.


Wealth inequality changed greatly in response to all these forces. Yet spatial inequalities never changed despite massive wealth accumulation, in ways ably mapped and explained by these two renowned economic historians." --Peter Lindert, coauthor of Making Social Spending Work and Unequal Gains: American Growth and Inequality since 1700 "This book is a treasure trove. The outcome of decades of research, A Capital's Capital builds on an array of wonderful data from Paris over almost two hundred years and uses the data to shed new light on the key aspects of wealth creation and distribution: the role of inheritance, savings strategies and portfolio composition, taxation, and the relation between private wealth and public wealth. A must-read for anyone interested in economic inequality and wealth." --Erik Bengtsson, Lund University "This book is a major addition to knowledge, and the authors are among the few real pioneers in the study of long-term changes in wealth distribution. This is the kind of research in economic history that will stand the test of time."-- Guido Alfani, author of As Gods Among Men: A History of the Rich in the West "A scholarly tour de force.


The book's rich and novel dataset allows for a more nuanced interpretation of the evolution of wealth inequality in Paris."-- Nathan Sussman, Geneva Graduate Institute "This book makes a major contribution. The specificity of the book is its laser-like focus on its primary sources; its very thorough analysis of these data complements other work (like Piketty's Capital ) that takes a more global perspective."-- Gabriel Zucman, Paris School of Economics and University of California, Berkeley.


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