New Books in Critical Theory

Joseph Stiglitz, "The Origins of Inequality" (Oxford UP, 2025)

13 snips
Nov 10, 2025
Joseph E. Stiglitz, a Nobel laureate and Columbia University professor, engages in a deep discussion about the roots of inequality, shaped by his six-decade focus on the issue. He explains how inequality is not inevitable but a political choice influenced by laws and institutions. Stiglitz highlights the role of monopoly power in wealth concentration and critiques macroeconomic policy failures exacerbating disadvantage. He advocates for policies like inheritance taxes and better public investment in education to foster equality and economic growth.
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INSIGHT

Inequality Is A Choice, Not Fate

  • Stiglitz frames inequality as a political choice shaped by the 'rules of the game' rather than natural law.
  • Multiple institutional changes since 1980 shifted the balance toward forces that increase inequality.
ANECDOTE

Gary, Indiana Shaped A Career

  • Stiglitz recounts growing up in Gary, Indiana, which motivated his shift from physics to economics.
  • His 1966 thesis on growth and distribution became a foundational reference on inequality.
INSIGHT

Monopoly And Governance Drive Top Wealth

  • Persistent monopoly power and weak antitrust enforcement raise top incomes and rents.
  • Corporate governance that permits outsized CEO pay further concentrates wealth at the top.
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